Skiff (email service) explained

Skiff (email service)
Screenshot Size:300
Collapsetext:Screenshot
Parent:Notion
Commercial:Yes
Type:Webmail
Registration:No longer accepted
Num Users:≈2 million users (2023, November)
Content License:Open Source
Owner:Notion
Author:Andrew Milich;

Jason Ginsberg

Current Status:Active, defunct as of February 9, 2024

Skiff is an email service startup company and collaboration tool, that provides privacy-friendly end-to-end encrypted Email and Cloud services.[1] [2] [3] The company's commercial strategy is focused in offering to its clients a Source-Available or Open-Source, transparent and audited Email, Calendar, and Cloud Storage services without trackers or advertisements.[4]

Skiff launched in 2021 and was developed in San Francisco, California.[5] In November 2023, 17 months after launch, it reached almost 2 million users.[6]

Skiff was acquired by Notion on 9 February 2024. Users will have six months to migrate their data before the closure of the services.[7] [8] [9] [10]

History

Skiff was founded by Andrew Milich and Jason Ginsberg in 2020 and was initially focused on providing a secure document editing service similar to Google Docs.[11] While Skiff was in beta, the founders released a public whitepaper explaining how Skiff’s encryption works.[12] [13] Skiff had its public launch out of beta in November 2021. A difference from other services was that it stored its files using the InterPlanetary File System (IPFS).[14]

Skiff Mail and Skiff Drive were launched in 2022.[15] [16]

In February 2024, Notion acquired Skiff and it is no longer open for registration. All user data will be deleted 6 months after the purchase date, but emails will continue to forward to your new address until February 9th of 2025.[17]

Software

Some of Skiff’s code is source-available with some libraries being open source.[18] [19] Skiff uses public-key authenticated encryption for secure and private access to end-to-end encrypted documents, files and emails.[20] [21] Skiff also allows users to send payments through MetaMask.[22]

Reviews

In a 2023 article, PCMAG reviewed Skiff pointing that Skiff offers "End-to-end encryption for email, collaboration, and calendar", making complements to the fact of its services being free and easy to use (while being available as Apps for macOS, Android, and iOS).[23] Moreover, it also was pointed the "cons" of Skiff services "requiring four separate mobile apps" and having "no encrypted email with nonusers". However, Skiff notably added PGP encryption support in December 2023.[24] [25]

PCMAG's final score review was "4.5/5 Outstanding".

Controversies

According with a WSJ article published in 2023, allegedly the Russian government banned Skiff from Russia, because of Skiff's end-to-end encryption business model, which is illegal in Russia. (And also due to the company's persistence in not handing over users data for the Russian Government, thus allegedly compromising the safety of its citizens).[26] As a result Skiff faced a 81% drop in traffic from Russia, and Andrew Milich itself stated that Skiff's engineers were scrambling to find ways to restore access to Russian users after the occurrence.

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Newman . Jared . 2022-06-27 . I'd love to dump Gmail for this slick, private email–but there's a catch . 2022-08-12 . Fast Company . en-US.
  2. Web site: Skiff bags $10.5M to build private/collaborative workspaces . 2022-08-12 . TechCrunch . en-US.
  3. Web site: Pierce . David . 2022-05-17 . Skiff Mail is taking on Gmail by betting on privacy — and crypto . 2022-08-12 . The Verge . en.
  4. Web site: Skiff - Private, encrypted, secure email - 10 GB free . 2024-02-01 . skiff.com . en.
  5. Web site: Skiff Banks $10.5M for E2E Encrypted Workplace Collaboration SecurityWeek.Com . 2022-08-12 . www.securityweek.com.
  6. Web site: 18 November 2023 . Skiff's Official Twitter Account . Twitter.
  7. Web site: Skiff - Private, encrypted, secure email - 10 GB free . 2024-02-10 . skiff.com . en.
  8. Web site: andrew-skiff . 2024-02-09 . Skiff x Notion . 2024-02-10 . r/Skiff.
  9. Web site: Mehta . Ivan . Notion acquires privacy-focused productivity platform Skiff . TechCrunch . 11 February 2024 . 10 February 2024.
  10. Web site: Kothari . Akshay . Meet Skiff, the newest member of the Notion family . Notion . 11 February 2024 . en-us . 9 February 2024.
  11. Web site: Skiff, an end-to-end encrypted alternative to Google Docs, raises $3.7M seed . 2022-08-12 . TechCrunch . en-US.
  12. Web site: Skiff – Security Whitepaper - Read more . 2024-02-18 . skiff.com . en.
  13. Web site: Skiff Whitepaper . 2024-02-18.
  14. Web site: Newman . Jared . 2021-11-15 . This privacy-first document editor has a wild new way of storing files . 2022-08-12 . Fast Company . en-US.
  15. Web site: Pierce . David . 2022-05-17 . Skiff Mail is taking on Gmail by betting on privacy — and crypto . 2022-08-12 . The Verge . en.
  16. Web site: 10GB de stockage gratuit et chiffré avec Skiff Drive - TOOLinux . 2022-08-12 . www.toolinux.com. June 17, 2022 .
  17. Web site: Mehta . Ivan . 2024-02-10 . Notion acquires privacy-focused productivity platform Skiff . 2024-02-12 . TechCrunch . en-US.
  18. Web site: 2022-05-18 . Skiff is launching Skiff Mail to take on Gmail with encryption #emailsecurity #phishing #ransomware . 2022-08-12 . NATIONAL CYBER SECURITY NEWS TODAY . en-US.
  19. Web site: skiff-apps/LICENSE at main · skiff-org/skiff-apps . 2024-01-03 . GitHub . en.
  20. Web site: Daniel . Alan . 2021-05-26 . Skiff Is Here To Make Work Privacy Great Again . 2022-08-12 . geekinsider.com . en-US.
  21. Web site: Skiff Review . 2022-08-12 . PCMAG . en.
  22. Web site: 2022-05-22 . Skiff Mail fait concurrence à Gmail en se concentrant sur la confidentialité et la cryptographie . 2022-08-12 . fr-FR.
  23. Web site: Skiff Review . 2024-02-01 . PCMAG . en.
  24. Web site: A modernized approach to your PGP encryption. . 2024-06-21 . www.skiff.com. June 21, 2024 .
  25. Web site: 18 December 2023 . Skiff's Official Twitter Account . Twitter.
  26. News: February 3, 2023 . Encryption Bans . . . What Is This, Russia? . The Wall Street Journal.