Pretty Easy privacy


pretty Easy privacy was a pluggable data encryption and verification system that provided automatic cryptographic key management through a set of libraries for written digital communications.
It existed as a plugin for Microsoft Outlook and Mozilla Thunderbird as well as a mobile app for Android and iOS. p≡p also worked under Microsoft Windows, Unix-like and Mac OS X operating systems. Its cryptographic functionality was handled by an open-source p≡p engine relying on already existing cryptographic implementations in software like GnuPG, a modified version of netpgp, and GNUnet.
pretty Easy privacy was first released in 2016. It is a free and open-source software.
p≡p was advertised as being easy to install, use, and understand. p≡p did not depend on any specific platform, message transport system, or centrally provided client–server or "cloud" infrastructures; p≡p is fully peer-to-peer by design.
Keys are exchanged opportunistically by transferring via email.

Enigmail support

Enigmail announced its support for the new "pretty Easy privacy" encryption in a joint Thunderbird extension to be released in December 2015. Patrick Brunschwig, the head of Enigmail, announced that p≡p core functionality was implemented in Enigmail in October 2016, ready for the Mozilla Festival then taking place in London.
In July 2020, Thunderbird 78 dropped support for the Enigmail Add-On. Thunderbird 78 includes OpenPGP functionality and no longer requires the installation of external software.

ISOC support

The Internet Society Switzerland Chapter and the Swiss p≡p foundation teamed up to implement privacy-enhancing standards at the basic level of internet protocols, and document them in the work of the Internet Engineering Task Force.

Controversy and Closure

In March 2021, reports surfaced that p≡p had paid for fake reviews for their apps.
As of January 2024, the company overseeing p≡p is not operational. Its website no longer functions, and development of the system has ceased.