Now that telephone consultations with lawyers, doctors, et al are rapidly being 
accepted as a matter of course, I think it's important there be some generally 
accepted way their clients & patients can communicate with them securely.  The 
basic technology for encryption & authentication has been well established for 
decades, but each client, patient, or sometimes industry relationship still 
seems to be a special case.

Am I missing something?  Pretty Easy Privacy (PEP) is now integrated into 
Thunderbird and is available on other platforms:

QUOTE - see Wikipedia https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pretty_Easy_privacy
It exists as a plugin for Microsoft Outlook[1] and Mozilla Thunderbird and also 
as a mobile app for Android[2][3] and iOS.[4]   p≡p also works under Microsoft 
Windows, Unix-like and Mac OS X operating systems.  Its cryptographic 
functionality is handled by open source p≡p engine relying on already existing 
cryptographic implementations in software like GnuPG, a modified version of 
netpgp (used only in iOS) and (as of p≡p v2.0) GNUnet. 
UNQUOTE

But lawyers & doctors are not IT-professionals and governments seem in no hurry 
to educate people re this topic.  GPs and lawyers also usually work in group 
practices which rely on consultants & service providers whose website- and 
email-servers could be anywhere, even offshore, which creates a barrier between 
a citizen's need for privacy and the people who might make it happen.

In the past many used FAXes to ensure confidentiality, but we should have moved 
forward by now.

David Lochrin



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