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Proton Launches Business Continuity Service to Keep Firms Communicating Through Outages

Encrypted email and video conferencing provider offers pre-provisioned 'dormant' accounts that can be switched on within minutes of a primary IT stack going down.

by Guru Writer
July 15, 2026
in News
Proton Launches Business Continuity Service to Keep Firms Communicating Through Outages
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Swiss encrypted communications provider Proton has launched a dedicated business continuity service, aimed at helping organisations keep email and video communications running when their primary IT infrastructure fails or is taken offline.

The service is built around Proton Mail and Proton Meet, and is designed to give security and IT teams a pre-configured fallback they can activate quickly during an outage, a ransomware incident, or a third-party service disruption, without requiring staff to install new software or reset credentials under pressure.

Proton said the launch responds to a threat landscape in which outages are increasingly frequent, ransomware is spreading further into the small and mid-sized business market, and organisations face growing exposure to decisions made by US-based cloud and software providers, which remain legally bound to comply with US government directives, including those restricting service to customers outside the United States.

The company argues this exposes a structural weakness common to many security architectures: because so much business email and collaboration software ultimately runs on a small number of hyperscale platforms, chiefly Amazon Web Services, Microsoft Azure and Google Cloud, a single infrastructure failure or access restriction can take down communications across otherwise unrelated organisations simultaneously.

How it works

Under Proton’s model, organisations set up two tiers of accounts in advance. Active accounts assigned to IT administrators, business continuity coordinators, and senior leadership remain configurable and testable at any time. Dormant accounts, provisioned for the wider workforce at a reduced cost, remain inactive in the background, tied to the correct user identity and permission group until needed.

When an incident is declared, an administrator makes a single DNS change, repointing the organisation’s MX record to Proton’s mail servers instead of its usual provider. Dormant accounts are activated when employees log in with credentials or access links distributed by their administrator, after which the whole team can continue operating on Proton’s infrastructure, which the company says is fully separate from Google, Microsoft and AWS.

Organisations can also pre-configure their existing email domain inside Proton Mail, or set up a secondary domain to test failover in advance, allowing continuity plans to be rehearsed before they are ever needed.

A security case built on jurisdiction and encryption

Proton is positioning the service as much on legal and jurisdictional grounds as on technical ones. The company’s infrastructure and legal base sit in Switzerland, which it describes as neutral territory outside both the Big Tech ecosystem and US regulatory reach. Proton Mail and Proton Meet use end-to-end encryption, and the company points to a decade-long uptime record, underpinned by a 99.95 percent service-level agreement, as evidence of its resilience credentials.

Raphael Auphan, Chief Operating Officer at Proton, said organisations increasingly need to plan for disruption that is political as well as technical in origin. “Whether it’s in a week or a year, preparing now will make the difference between a managed response and an operational crisis,” Auphan said.

Proton already counts more than 100,000 organisations as Proton Mail users, and offers an Easy Switch for Business tool for firms migrating their primary email service outright. The new continuity offering is aimed instead at organisations that want an emergency fallback without giving up their existing primary provider.

Security teams considering the service will need to weigh the operational overhead of maintaining dormant accounts and rehearsed failover processes against the risk reduction it offers — a trade-off likely to depend on an organisation’s existing business continuity maturity and its risk appetite around single-vendor dependency.

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