Proton
Proton Mail Lovie Awards

ProtonMail’s encrypted email service was recently selected by the International Academy of Digital Arts & Sciences as a Finalist for the 2016 Lovie Awards.

Update: We have just heard that we have been selected as the 2016 winner in the Mobile Utilities & Services category! Thanks to your votes, we also won the People’s choice award!

For those who have never heard of the Lovie Awards (that would include us until a few weeks ago), the Lovie Awards are the European counterpart of the American Webby Awards, which are also known as the “Oscars of the Internet”. Even though Proton Mail is an European project, we were also honored at the Webby Awards earlier this year.

Like the Webby Awards, the Lovie Awards have a strong emphasis on innovation and design, and it is quite surprising that given our emphasis on security and encryption, we are finalists for an award with a strong creative focus. When considering the full list of finalists(nueva ventana), the inclusion of Proton Mail is even more extraordinary. This is a prestigious award, and we are happy to be finalists in the Mobile & Applications category.

From the start, we have always put a strong emphasis on design, since our primary goal is to make email encryption more widespread by making PGP easier to use. Good design and good user interfaces are absolutely critical because the most secure email system in the world will not improve internet security if it is so complicated nobody can use it. While Proton Mail continues to innovate on security, we have devoted an equally large amount of resources towards product design. It is rewarding to see that the Internet industry has finally taken notice and recognized us for our commitment to encryption with good design.

While the winners of the 2016 Lovie Awards will be selected by a panel of eminent judges, there is also a People’s Lovie Award which is selected by the voting public. If you would like to help give Proton Mail a boost and spread the word about online privacy, you can vote for Proton Mail at the following link:

http://www.peopleslovie.eu/#utilities-and-services-1(nueva ventana)

Registration on that site unfortunately IS required in order to vote (likely to deter automated voting), but the voting process itself is quite painless. Simply click on Proton Mail as shown in the image below:

protonmail-encrypted-email-lovie-award

Proton Mail is a community project, because it was initially funded by the community, and the direction of our development is entirely guided by our community(nueva ventana). We are open source, and developed with input from the community(nueva ventana). Therefore, Proton Mail’s excellence in design is also due to your efforts, through the thousands of suggestions, bug reports, and other feedback the community has provided over the years. Thus, Proton Mail’s nomination for a People’s Lovie Award is also a recognition of our community of over a million users.

In addition to being an honor, winning the People’s Lovie Award will be an opportunity to share Proton Mail with a whole new community of people, and help even more people discover easy-to-use encrypted email. We would love to have your vote and your support to help Proton Mail reach an even larger audience!

Artículos relacionados

A computer monitor, a box of case files, and a lock representing law firms that protect their information security
en
A simple guide to law firm cybersecurity. See how to protect business and client data, prevent breaches, and stay compliant with encryption.
The cover image for a Proton Pass blog about brushing scams, which shows a package with a warning sign above it
en
A brushing scam means your personal data has leaked online. Learn how to protect yourself with hide-my-email aliases and dark web monitoring.
An encryption lock breaking
en
Apple turned off its end-to-end encryption in the UK in response to a government notice. We look at what this means and how people in the UK can protect their data.
Image showing Google, Apple, and Meta as apps that allow surveillance
en
Big Tech companies - Apple, Google, and Meta - have built a mass surveillance machine that the government can easily tap into.
Proton symbol for protecting user privacy after Apple disabled ADP in the UK
en
Apple dropped ADP for UK users, leaving data unprotected by end-to-end encryption. See why E2EE matters and how to keep your data safe.
The cover image for a Proton Pass blog about how to find your saved passwords on Android, which shows a phone screen, an Android icon, and three password fields
en
If you're using an Android device, here's how you can find the saved passwords on your phone and how Proton Pass can help you organize them more securely.