Just in point of fact, depending on how the automatic encryption is implemented, that may or may not actually be secure at this moment. In any event, it cannot be guaranteed to remain the same even if it is secure today. The site could change on the fly and nobody would notice until it was too late.Or, depending on how it's done, it may not even make use of the public key it claims to. To say that it's as secure as manual PGP encryption is a lie, plain and simple. Saying it "is secure today," may not be... but I don't care enough to check, frankly. Maybe if Atlantis didn't seem to make such ridiculous claims even on the front page of the site, I'd feel differently, but hey -- I guess I'll never know.If you think I'm being biased or unfair: at least one person over there is stretching truth so far that it snaps.