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August 12, 2015 12:00 pm

It's Time to Encrypt Your Email: On Your Smartphone

Final product image
What You'll Be Creating

This is the latest tutorial in our series focusing on encrypting your email. In thefirst tutorial, weintroduced the general concepts of encryption and how they can be used to secure and authenticate our emails. Inthe second tutorial, I guided you through installing encryption software on your computer and getting started sending your first messages. In the third episode, I introduced you toKeybase, a service designed to strengthen the Web of Trust. And, in the fourth tutorial, I reviewed Mailvelope, a browser extension for sending and receiving encrypted emails.In addition to reading the earlier episodes, you may want to check out the Electronic Frontier Foundation'sSurveillance Self-Defense Guide.

In this tutorial, I'll introduce you to iPGMail, an iOS application that makes the sending and receiving of encrypted messages more manageable on smartphones and tablets. I'll also cover some of the vulnerabilities inherent in carrying your private key on your device.

In upcoming episodes,as part of the series onmanaging your digital assets after your death, we'll use what we've learned to create a secure cache of important information for your descendants in case of emergency.

Just a reminder, I regularly participate in the discussions below. If you have a question or topic suggestion, please post a comment below.You can alsofollow me on Twitter @reifmanoremail medirectly.

What's iPGMail?

Now that we've begun using encrypted messaging on the desktop and in the browser, it makes sense to ask if we can use it from our devices. The answer is yes, but not without some usability limitations and minor security risks.

iPGMail is an iOS application that helps you send and receive encrypted messages on an iPhone or iPad.iPGMail costs $1.99 at the App Store. It's written by developer Wyllys Ingersoll.

The application makes it possible to store your private key and others' public keys on your device and to send and receive encrypted messages on the go.

Getting Started With iPGMail

If you want to follow along, you'll need to purchase iPGMail at the App Storefor $1.99 (it's worth it):

iPGMail in the iOS App Store

Once you're running iPGMail on your phone, it's time to generate or import our public and private key.

Import Your Key Pair

Initially in iPGMail, you'll see an empty public key listing. ClickPrivate to go to the private key listing:

iPGMail List of Public Keys

If you've followed along with our earlier tutorials, you're already using a key pair. If you need to generate a new key pair, iPGMail can do that for you. Just click the+ sign in the upper right:

iPGMail Help with Keys

Importing an Existing Private Key

Here's where things get tricky. A private key string is quite long, not easily typed into a phone. It's also likely living on your desktop machine or a USB key—not easily transferred to a phone.

I know what you're thinking, but emailing your private key to yourself would expose it to a number of possible security threats. Placing it in Dropbox would expose it to probable government surveillance.

One way is to use iTunes File Sharing to transfer your private key .asc file to your phone. I prefer to useAirDrop. Personally, I find the AirDrop interface between iOS and Mac OS X to be fairly counterintuitive and only intermittently reliable—yet it is still far more successful than trying anything these days with the pathetic usability black hole which is iTunes. However, if AirDrop works well, this is a great use case for it.

Caution: Only use AirDrop for this on a secure WiFi network.

Enable AirDrop on your device. Then, on OS X, right click on your private key .asc file, selectShare > AirDrop,and click your profile name. You'll see something like this:

iPGMail Sending Your Private Key via Airdrop from Desktop to iPhone

When you click on the file on your device, AirDrop will allow you to open it iniPGMail:

iPGMail AirDrop Receipt of Private Key on iPhone

There's my private key listed in iPGMail—you can find me at Keybase:

iPGMail Your Private Key

The Safety of Your Private Key

The root of PGP security relies on you keeping your private key completely private and safe. Carrying it around on a device connected to the Internet makes it inherently vulnerable.

In iPGMail'sFAQ, they describe a variety of layers they use for protecting your key:

  1. The entire database used to hold all of the PGP keys is stored in an encrypted format on disk and cannot be read from or written to while the device is locked or booting.
  2. The private keys in the DB (which is itself already encrypted) are also protected with a key derived from your private key passphrase, so choose a strong passphrase for your secret keys.
  3. You can set the appPin Protectionin the settings for the app to force you to enter a unique 4-digit passcode to unlock the app. On newer iPhone and iPad models, this also enables you to use theTouch IDfeature.
  4. Make sure you have enabled thestronger passcode lockin the iOS settings.

To choose a robust passphrase for your key, I suggest reading The Intercept'srecent column on dice-generated passwords.

The more robust your passphrase, the more difficult it can be to regularly type it in on a device such as an iPhone. This is one of the inherent usability issues with iPGMail and encryption on your iPhone.

Sending an Encrypted Message

Before you can begin sending an encrypted message, you need to import the public keys of recipients that you may want to correspond with. iPGMail has made this fairly straightforward.

Import Public Keys

iPGMail offers public key search and lookup from PGP.net and Keybase; we explored the latter inIt's Time To Encrypt Your Email: Using Keybase (Tuts+).

Click the+ sign in the upper right and select Search Keybase. I'm going to send a note to Keybase founder Chris Coyne.

iPGMail Importing Public Keys for Recipients

iPGMail lets me search for "chriscoyne":

iPGMail Search Keybase for Public Keys of Recipients

Click theKey Fingerprint and import the key. You can see my eventual public keys listed below:

iPGMail Public Key Listing

Compose Your Message

To send a message, click theCompose icon at the bottom of the screen. Click the+ sign on the To: line to select one of your public key recipients. Then, type aSubject and write your message:

iPGMail Composing an Encrypted Message

Here's what it looks like to select your recipient's public key:

iPGMail Selecting Recipient Public Key

iPGMail will use this public key to encrypt the message for the recipient.

Send Message Directly or Copy to Clipboard

iPGMail can send your message using your device's SMTP settings, or it can fill your clipboard with the encrypted message to paste into your own mail program, i.e. Send Email or Copy to Clipboard:

iPGMail  Send Email Directly or Copy to Clipboard

Now let's take a look at decrypting inbound messages.

Receiving an Encrypted Message

Messages With Encrypted Attachments

Here's the message I received back from Chris Coyne, encrypted inside attachments:

iPGMail Receiving an Encrypted Mesage

When I click onencrypted.asc, my iPhone allows me to Open in iPGMail:

iPGMail  asc Action to Import to IPGMail

Here's one of the places where iPGMail will ask for your passphrase. It's definitely a usability burden in place to preserve security:

iPGMail  Entering your private key passphrase

Chris didn't sign his message(perhaps it was sent by an impostor), hence the red X, but you can see the decrypted attachments below and click on them to read the message:

iPGMail  The Decrypted Message

Messages With Encryption in the Message Body

Here's an encrypted message I received where the secret is plaintext in the message body. I use my iPhone to copy the entire PGP Message:

iPGMail  Copy and Paste an Encrypted Message

iPGMail nicely uses clipboard detection and immediately when I switch over to the app, it asks if I want to Import the message:

iPGMail  Clipboard Detection of Encrypted Message

Then, it displays the secret message for me. I've blacked it out because, well, it's secret (don't worry, my life's really not that exciting):

iPGMail Reading the Encrypted Message

Working With Secure Files

On the iPGMail Settings page, you can integrate your iCloud and Dropbox clouds:

iPGMail  Settings for File access Dropbox and iCloud

This enables you to work with encrypted documents from the iPGMailFiles page:

iPGMail Managing encryption with files on the iPhone

Closing Thoughts

iPGMail does a very nice job enabling basic encryption on iOS. I think it handles a number of difficult requirements of using PGP encryption relatively gracefully.

Yet it's unable at this time or does not simplify the usability of private key management on the iPhone to make it readily usable with all your messaging. It is certainly functional and capable for occasional encrypted messaging needs—and it's worth more than its $1.99 price tag.

Until Apple integrates secure messaging into Mail directly (or other solutions appear), this is the best PGP device messaging I can imagine.Regardless, I hope you're well on your way to encrypting more of your communications—from the desktop to the laptop and from the browser to your iPhone.

Please feel free to post your questions and comments below. You can also follow me on Twitter @reifmanoremail medirectly.Browsemy Tuts+ instructor pageif you'd liketo see other tutorials I've written.

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