@resist1984
Would this thing work for you?
https://imapsync.lamiral.info/X/
I was going to suggest imapsync..
I use it for migrations between email providers for people often.
Given that you want to use Tor too.. I wonder if it would work with torsocks ?
@m_svo @resist1984 I haven't used torsocks for a while.. but my recollection is you just prefix what you want to do with it..
so
`torsocks imapsync ... `
@resist1984 @kat
I'm not sure running https://imapsync.lamiral.info/X/ through Tor will cause Yandex to drop packets, as it would maybe get a request from the host in the web, not the client (your browser)?
@resist1984 @m_svo it was just an idea. You understand your usecase and threat model best!
@kat @m_svo indeed I'll have to be the judge of whether it meets the security needs. But whether it's even feasible is unclear. The CLI does not seem to have an option to select a mitm, which means either lamiral.info is hard-coded, or it means there is no mitm (that I directly connect to the imap servers).
It's software you run... that makes an imap connection to each email server using imap and can pull the email from one end to the other... Lamiral.info is just where you get the software from. It might even be packaged for your Linux distro already.
There is no javascript or anythin else involved. it's software you run on your computer.
@m_svo @kat you might be righ about the software, but it's kind of up in the air whether the installable software talks to the IMAP servers, or it uses the web service through an API. Normally I would expect the software to not depend on the web service at lamiral.info, but when I see his prices i wonder if that prices in the cost of him maintaining a service.
@resist1984 @m_svo i don't believe it does. But you will have to convince yourself. It's Free software