Google introduced it’s new hosted S/MIME solution to enhance security for Gmail in the enterprise. SMIME certificates give the highest levels of confidentiality and security for your electronic correspondences by permitting you to digitally sign and encrypt your mail and connections.
Encryption means that only your expected beneficiary will have the capacity to read the mail while digitally signing permits them to affirm you as the sender and confirm the message was not altered in transit.
Customer side S/MIME has been around for a long time. Be that as it may, its selection has been restricted because it is difficult to deploy.
With Google’s new hosted S/MIME arrangement, once an incoming encrypted email with S/MIME is received, it is put away utilizing Google’s encryption.Utilizing hosted S/MIME gives an additional layer of security compared with utilizing SMTP over TLS to send emails.
For the vast majority of emails, this is the safest solution – giving the benefit of strong authentication and encryption in transit – without losing the safety and features of Google’s processing.
S/MIME likewise includes indisputable account-level signatures confirmation (versus only domain-based signature with DKIM). This implies email recipients can guarantee that incoming email is really from the sending account, not only a matching domain and that the message has not been altered after it was sent.
To use hosted S/MIME, companies need to upload their own certificates (with private keys) to Gmail, which can be done by end users via Gmail settings or by admins in bulk via the Gmail API.
S/MIME requires every email address to have a suitable certificate attached to it and these certificates need to be obtained from trusted root Authorities which meet Crypto standards.
Hosted S/MIME is upheld on Gmail web/iOS/Android, on Inbox and on customers associated with the Gmail benefit by means of IMAP. Clients can exchange signed and encrypted emails with beneficiaries utilizing hosted S/MIME or customer side S/MIME.
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Good to hear, but would be better if Google would *issue* the certs for web users - after all, they are a CA in their own right now...
Yes right, but for some reasons they are not providing SMIME certificates. But nowadays most of the CA would issue SMIME certificates for Free.
Certificate requirements https://support.google.com/a/answer/7300887
Sure, but given they are requiring the private key be uploaded, they could as easily issue one on-demand for any gmail customer; would get much more adoption if you aren't required to go find another CA to issue you a cert.