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Windows  |  Security / Privacy  |  Encryption / File Protection  |  PGP Desktop

PGP Desktop

PGP Desktop - 9.0.1

PGP disk & messaging security for IM, email & disks

All Time: (1.2)
Version 9.0.1: (1.0)
Selected Version: 9.0.1
Release Date: 2005-05-27
License: Commercial
Downloads (version 9.0.1): 29
Downloads (all versions): 12,307
Price: $69.00

Information Related to Version:

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Product Description:

The completely redesigned PGP Desktop 9.0 incorporates PGP Universal technology to provide automatic encryption, decryption, digital signatures, verification, and recipient key lookup, making it appropriate for both novice and power users. New features in PGP Desktop 9.0 include a completely redesigned user interface, AOL Instant Messenger and iChat encryption, S/MIME interoperability, PGP Global Directory integration, and significantly improved compression.

The most significant PGP Desktop product upgrade ever offered, PGP Desktop 9.0 will change the way people use encryption. Now users can encrypt and decrypt, search for keys, and install and set up automatically. Which means they can now send (or mandate) secure email even to those who know nothing about encryption.

Operating System Requirements:

This product is designed to run on the following operating systems:

  • Windows XP
  • Windows 2000

Additional Requirements:

  • Windows 2000/XP

Screenshots:

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Your Installed Versions:


 

Feedback Summary:

Version 9.0.1:
Overall Rating: (1.0) Features: (3.0) Support: (1.5)
Ease of Use: (3.0) Quality / Stability: (1.0) Price: (1.5)
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PGP Desktop ReviewNot compatible with Leopard and horrible support - Version: 9.5.3, 11/5/2007 11:06PM PST

samibusch
I paid beginning this year for an update that is now completely useless. It is incompatible with Leopard and PGP crashes. I cannot even open my encrypted discs or any other encrypted files. Most ridiculous is that you I have to pay $30-40 for each customer support contact. Judging from the user forums every mac user is facing the same problem.
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PGP Desktop CommentarySecure Email Alternatives - Version: 9.6, 4/3/2007 10:35AM PST

spacecraft
Has anyone tried the Voltage Security Network software? How does it compare to PGP?
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PGP Desktop ReviewVery Bad Support - Version: 9.0.5, 3/18/2006 12:06PM PST

russ19
I've been using PGP 9.0 since it came out, installed every update, etc. When I first installed the software, it wouldn't work with Pine, so I worked through the user forums to try and sort this problem out. Essentially, I gave up--PGP Desktop 9 doesn't work with Pine, don't even try.

Next, I had a problem with retrieving messages using Thunderbird. PGP Corp told me to purchase a $43 support incident, although I paid $200 for the software. Finally, it was worked on the forums, although not without snide comments from the PGP folks themselves about all sorts of nonsense. Essentially, they claim this is a bug in Thunderbird, not their problem, and it's okay if you pay $43 to sort out interoperation problems with software they are supposed to work with.

BTW--you have to pay $43 to get a support incident so you can even log onto their web site, and get access to their knowledge base, to solve even common problems.

Finally, PGP just flat stopped working a couple of days ago. I called for technical support, and was told to purchase a $43 support incident. I posted the problem, in full detail, on the user forums, and never even received a single response. I purchased their $43 support incident, and then the support incident was down all day, it just happened to come back up a few minutes after business hours, when I could no longer work on the problem with them until after the weekend was over.

To make matter worse, their support model is strictly based on a "call back" basis. You ask them to call you for a problem, and they call you sometime in the next 24 hours. You have to sit around waiting for their call, so don't go out to dinner, don't go to the store, don't play with your kids, and don't go to the bathroom, in case they call while you're sitting next to your phone. The time they spend calling you and leaving a voice mail counts against the 20 minutes you get in the support incident (for $43).

Their support staff is snotty, and horrible. The first time I called about the problem with the support incident, they claimed there was an "echo" on the line, and they needed to call me back to work on it. When I asked when they would call me back, they said "sometime today, maybe monday...." (this was on a friday. I asked why they needed to call me back, and they said "there's an echo on the line." So, they have to wait a day to call me back for an echo? I asked the support person this, and he just laughed, and said: "That's the way we do things here, you never call us, we always call you. If you don't like it, I can't help you."

I asked to speak to a supervisor, and he laughed, and said: "They're never hear, and they'll tell you the same thing. You're a single user license, it doesn't really matter."

Avoid this product, and this company, at all costs. Use enigmail, or some other solution, instead.
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