Kolab Now

Kolab Now is a web-based email and groupware service, based completely on free and open-source software. It is owned and operated by Kolab Systems AG and was formerly known as MyKolab.

Kolab Now
Type of site
Webmail, groupware
Available inEnglish, German, French
OwnerApheleia IT AG[1][2]
URLkolabnow.com
Alexa rank 586,225 (December 2016)[3]
CommercialYes
RegistrationRequired
LaunchedJanuary 2013 (2013-01)
Current statusOnline
Content licence
Free, open-source

Kolab

Kolab Systems AG is the company behind the Kolab groupware suite. Founded in 2010 in Zürich, Switzerland, Kolab Systems has taken the place of the Kolab Konsortium which initially provided Kolab services primarily in German speaking areas from 2004 to 2010. It is also the largest contributor to the Roundcube web mailer project.[4] The company's board of directors is composed of CEO Georg Greve, the founding president of Free Software Foundation Europe, CTO Jeroen van Meeuwen, Michael Moser, CCO and co-founder of Switzerlands leading Open Source Integrator Adfinis-SyGroup AG, and Philipp Koch, co-founder of Swiss hosting company Nine.ch.

Background

Kolab Now, under the original name "MyKolab", was launched in January 2013 as a public beta release and became fully available later that year in August 1, as a paid service.[5]

After documents detailing United States and British government mass surveillance programs like PRISM and Tempora were leaked by Edward Snowden in May 2013,[6][7] US-based companies Lavabit and Silent Circle, under pressure of government agencies, decided to shut down their email services rather than run the risk of having to disclose personal data of their users.[8][9] In turn, Pamela Jones, author of now-defunct legal site Groklaw, revealed her use of MyKolab in her farewell post.[10] Jones' endorsement increased demand for MyKolab.[11]

Based outside of the United States, Kolab Systems received media attention as one of the few and most secure alternatives still in operation.[12]

Privacy of customer data

Hosted in Switzerland, Kolab Now claims the benefit of strict privacy laws; it uses exclusively free or open source software, guaranteeing transparency.[13] Because the service is subject to the national laws of Switzerland, Kolab Now states that there will be no access to a user's data by third parties without a duly authorized warrant issued by a Swiss judge.[14] It is also stated in the terms of service that only the minimum of logs, necessary for debugging and improvement of the service, is kept.[14]

Requests from government agencies

Like any company, Kolab Now can be obliged to provide access to lawful interception requests. However, the Swiss authorities are generally reluctant to make such requests for access, and the government publishes anonymised statistics of all such lawful interceptions along with the rationale.[15]

As of 1 September 2015, Kolab Now reports having granted only one request from a government agency for data concerning a customer,[16] and they note that this was an "administrative request", i.e. a request for information about a customer rather than a request for access to the customer's data. Kolab Now received two further requests but denied them because they came from an agency with no jurisdiction in Switzerland (both were from U.S. local police).[16]

In 2012, in all of Switzerland, there were only 20 cases of real-time internet wire-tapping and a further 26 for retroactive communication meta-information.[17] Swiss Federal Intelligence Service traditionally have no mandate to operate within the country. A controversial revision of the law, effective 1 September 2017, has recently given them wider license, in particular wholesale monitoring of cross-border traffic. According to Kolab Now, not much will change for its customers, however. ([18])

Email encryption

Kolab Now chose not to provide server-side encryption, and recommends using Kontact or Mozilla Thunderbird with Enigmail for proper end-to-end encryption.[19] With server-side encryption, the encrypted data, the key, and the passphrase would need to pass through the web interface and be available on the server. Holding all three, the provider would have access to all the data despite the encryption.

Account types

Kolab Now offers 2 types of accounts: Individual and Group manager accounts.[20]

Individual account

It is aimed at the individual who wishes a more secure and private alternative to free email services, with full groupware functionality. There's the option of a Lite[1] version, which offers the email service only and do not include the groupware synchronisation feature. Standard storage size for this account type ranges from 2 up to 100[21] GB, with cost incurring accordingly.

Group Manager account

This account type provides the customer with an administration login, used purely to set up the actual groupware account within a domain under the customer's control, and to administrate users existing within that domain. It is also possible to use an own SSL Certificate for that domain.[22] Cost is incurred per user in a similar fashion to the individual accounts.

Features

Synchronisation with mobile devices

The ActiveSync option allows to synchronize emails, contacts, events and tasks from Kolab Now to a mobile device. This works with all devices that support ActiveSync, such as Android, iPhone or Blackberry Z10. Alternatively, it is possible to use CalDAV and CardDAV capable clients to synchronise data.

Native desktop client for all platforms

The Kolab Client runs on all modern operating systems such as Linux, Windows and MacOS. It supports different applications such as Mail, Address Books, Calendars, ToDo Management, Journals, Notes and offers many detailed features for each of them. It is based on Kontact and uses the Qt Technology to be fully portable.

Server-side mail filtering

It is possible to define the criteria for emails to be filtered into different mail folders. The filtering will happen on the server right after the mail is received. This way emails are the same on all devices. Users can edit the filters as SIEVE scripts directly.

Free/Busy Information for Planning

Allows to see whether the participants of events are free or busy without revealing any information about what they are doing during these times. This allows to schedule appointments and ensure that everybody is able to participate.

Other available features:

  • Threaded mailview
  • Task management
  • File storage
  • Customisable webclient
  • Set up multiple identities
  • Multiple calendar folders and views

Payment and pricing

Kolab Now currently supports PayPal and Bitcoin as well as credit card as payment methods for monthly subscriptions and wire transfer for yearly payments only. The current monthly price for individual accounts with standard groupware functionality is 8.99 CHF, and for the email-only version, 4.55 CHF.[20]

Controversies

In 2015, Kolab Systems, now known as Apheleia IT AG, collected approx. $103,000 USD through crowdfunding to modernise the Roundcube email client as "Roundcube Next".[23] However, the work was never completed.[24] Thomas Bruederli, the maintainer of the crowdfunding project[25], has blocked requests for information about the project's status.[26]

gollark: The bestestestet keygens permanently burn music into your computer's BIOS chip.
gollark: 'Tis legally required, apparently.
gollark: What is "tracker"? Is it this?
gollark: "Træcker"?
gollark: The osmarks.tk secondary computing server™ has an ultra-powerful™ Ryzen 3 1200 with more than THREE cores, 8GB DDR4-2933 RAM, and the most powerful GPU ever designed, the Nvidia GT 710.

See also

References

  1. "Kolab Systems AG". kolabsys.com.
  2. "Terms of Service". kolabnow.com.
  3. "KolabNow.com Site Info". Alexa Internet. Retrieved 31 December 2016.
  4. "The Kolab story". The Roundcube Inbox.
  5. "MyKolab.com: Building the Open Source Cloud service that was missing". kolab.org. Archived from the original on 4 October 2013. Retrieved 12 September 2013.
  6. Barton Gellman (10 June 2013). "Edward Snowden says motive behind leaks was to expose 'surveillance state'". Washington Post.
  7. Barton Gellman (9 June 2013). "Edward Snowden comes forward as source of NSA leaks". Washington Post.
  8. Ladar Levison. "Lavabit". lavabit.com.
  9. "To Our Customers". Silent Circle Blog.
  10. "Groklaw - Forced Exposure ~pj". groklaw.net.
  11. "After Groklaw shutdown: MyKolab as Lavabit alternative, offering Lite option". kolabnow.com.
  12. Adam Clark Estes. "Why Kolab Might Be the Best Secure Email Service Still Standing". Gizmodo. Gawker Media.
  13. "Kolab Systems AG". kolabsys.com.
  14. "Terms of Service". kolabnow.com.
  15. "Statistics". admin.ch.
  16. "Lawful Access Statistics". kolabnow.com.
  17. https://www.li.admin.ch/download/stats_2012.xlsx
  18. "Comment on the Revised Secret Service Law". kolabnow.com.
  19. "FAQ". kolabnow.com.
  20. "Pricing". kolabnow.com.
  21. Kolab Systems AG. "MyKolab.com: Receives best grade for user friendliness, offers more storage".
  22. "Account Management". kolabnow.com.
  23. "Roundcube Next". Indiegogo. Retrieved 12 April 2020.
  24. "In 2018, RoundCube Next Remains Dead In The Water - Phoronix". www.phoronix.com. Retrieved 12 April 2020.
  25. "IndieGoGo Roundcube Next Project Updates Page".
  26. "What about Roundcube Next?".
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