LAS VEGAS
A start-up company wants to make your emails vanish forever — but in a good way.
The
firm, Confidential CC, has created an application that lets people send
self-destructing messages from whatever email accounts they fancy.
Unlike
rival apps dedicated to sending messages or images that vanish after
being viewed, Confidential CC is designed to work with existing email
accounts such as Gmail and Outlook.
"You
receive all your email like usual, we just add a new address line that
lets you send a CCC self-destruct email," said company co-founder Warren
Barthes, speaking at the Collision technology conference in Las Vegas
on Wednesday.
The Confidential CC app
for iPhones and other Apple mobile devices is now available on the App
Store, and becomes fully functional on May 21. Versions for
Android-powered devices and desktop computers are also planned.
Confidential
CC serves as a central hub on a smartphone or tablet to manage any or
all email accounts. After firing up the app, people log into their email
accounts as they normally would, the former French telecom executive
demonstrated.
POWER TO THE SENDER
A 'CCC' address line appears below the 'BCC' box email users are accustomed to seeing.
CCC messages can't be printed, forwarded or saved, and vanish after being closed. They are also encrypted from end-to-end.
To
thwart those who might think to take a picture of an ephemeral email,
identities of senders and recipients are not displayed simultaneously,
and text in messages shifts from blurred to focused as readers scroll
through.
"We give power to the
sender," said Barthes, who joined co-founder Rachel Tigges in starting
Confidential CC about three years ago after moving from his home country
of France to New York City.
Additional
features in the Confidential CC application include cancelling
accidentally sent messages, fetching attachments, and setting times for
email to be sent.
The Confidential
application will be free at the outset, with the startup intent on
refining it before looking to money-making methods such as charging for
downloads or licensing service to banks or other companies where
security of information is paramount.
"Digital
communications are under constant misuse today — from private emails
being forwarded accidentally to malicious attacks threatening a business
or government," Tigges said.
"It's
unacceptable that email, which is free and open for all, is presenting
such huge risk to users. Maybe, in five years, people will use CCC lines
in Gmail, Outlook, everywhere."
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