You Should Use a Private Email Server. Google Makes It Hard

Helm offers a $500 way to get off Gmail forever, as long as you bug your loved ones to check their spam folders

Bloomberg Businessweek
Bloomberg Businessweek

--

A Helm server. Photo: Molly Cranna for Bloomberg Businessweek

By Max Chafkin

Hillary, Ivanka, and Jared were right. No, not about that. Or that. And definitely not that. Just about the one thing, really: the utility of a private email system. Of course, Clintonemail.com proved disastrous to the former secretary of state’s image in 2016. (Ivanka and Jared’s use of ijkfamily.com has proved far less headline-grabbing.) But while paying IT consultants to install servers in your basement, as Clinton famously did, can be a bad look politically, it has caught on among executives. In some circles it’s become common to have what’s called “the Hillary setup.”

The security rationale for owning a private email server is straightforward. The main way hackers break into email accounts is by phishing, sending links to fake login websites that trick you into giving away your password. But traditional email servers don’t use the web at all. The only way to log in is through Outlook, Apple Mail, or another email app, making them more or less impossible to phish.

Privacy is another draw. The server’s data can’t be tapped by, say, Google to form a sprawling…

--

--