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easyDNS revives encrypted email forwarding and open-sources mxcrypt

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By AI, Created 8:36 PM UTC, May 27, 2026, /AGP/ – easyDNS Technologies Inc. has brought back its GPG-encrypted email forwarding service and open-sourced the mxcrypt relay that powers it. The move targets growing demand for practical email privacy tools as Canada debates lawful-access legislation under Bill C-22.

Why it matters: - easyDNS is pushing a privacy tool that protects stored email without forcing users to switch to a full encrypted email platform. - The feature is aimed at people and businesses that forward mail to providers such as Gmail or iCloud but still want stronger protection for messages at rest. - The launch lands amid renewed concern over Canada’s proposed lawful-access rules under Bill C-22.

What happened: - easyDNS Technologies Inc. announced the return of its GPG-encrypted email forwarding service. - The company also open-sourced mxcrypt, the Postfix-based relay technology behind the service. - The service was originally launched in 2013. - The feature is now available across all easyDNS email-forwarding plans. - The open-source mxcrypt relay is publicly available via GitHub.

The details: - The system encrypts forwarded email with a user’s public GPG key before the message reaches a third-party mailbox provider. - The approach is designed to protect email data at rest, not to replace end-to-end encryption. - Users publish a public GPG key alongside an existing mailmap, and inbound messages are encrypted automatically before relay. - The setup works inside standard email-forwarding infrastructure. - The relay preserves normal email behavior, including MIME formatting and attachments. - The mxcrypt relay integrates with Postfix, the widely used mail transfer agent. - easyDNS says the model can be deployed by other mail operators, hosting companies and privacy-focused organizations for use with any email provider worldwide.

Between the lines: - easyDNS framed the release as a response to broader concern about privacy, surveillance and centralized control of communications infrastructure. - The company also positioned the tool as a practical way to reduce exposure on third-party mail servers, where sensitive business, legal, medical and personal messages can sit unprotected for years. - Mark E. Jeftovic, easyDNS founder and CEO, said the goal is to make practical encryption easier to deploy and to protect users from overreach by state and non-state actors. - Jeftovic also argued that lawful-access proposals can create warrantless surveillance risk and can force providers to hand over email without notifying users.

What’s next: - Other email operators can now adopt mxcrypt independently instead of relying on easyDNS’s implementation. - The company is betting that broader availability will encourage wider use of encrypted email forwarding as a privacy baseline. - easyDNS says the service will continue as a pragmatic privacy layer rather than a replacement for true end-to-end encrypted communications.

The bottom line: - easyDNS is turning encrypted email forwarding into a reusable tool for the wider market, not just its own customers.

Disclaimer: This article was produced by AGP Wire with the assistance of artificial intelligence based on original source content and has been refined to improve clarity, structure, and readability. This content is provided on an “as is” basis. While care has been taken in its preparation, it may contain inaccuracies or omissions, and readers should consult the original source and independently verify key information where appropriate. This content is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal, financial, investment, or other professional advice.

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