Session vs Zoho Mail
Side-by-side trajectory, velocity, and editorial themes.
Session shipped a protocol rewrite and a paid tier, then went publicly broke — the founder is asking users to bail it out.
Session is simultaneously in its most ambitious technical phase and an open funding crisis. Protocol V2 — re-implementing forward secrecy and layering post-quantum cryptography on top of Session's onion-routed transport — has been announced, and the Session Pro paid tier exited beta planning into a December development update. Then in March, cofounder Chris McCabe published a personal appeal saying the project cannot continue developing without user support, and the public feed has been quiet since.
The product roadmap that was meant to fund itself via Session Pro is colliding with the underlying problem the appeal makes plain: the Loki/Oxen-era token economics and donations aren't covering ongoing development. Protocol V2 and Pro are the bets that have to land for Session to remain viable; if Pro doesn't convert a meaningful share of the user base, the next twelve months are about scope reduction, not feature growth. The Feb 1 APT key rotation in January suggests the core infrastructure is still being maintained — for now.
Watch for either a hard Session Pro launch and conversion announcement, or a more explicit wind-down / handoff post. A long stretch of silence after a funding appeal usually resolves one way or the other within a quarter; the absence of any new posts since mid-March is itself a signal.
Zoho Mail bets programmability and MCP integration will outflank the legacy inbox.
The last quarter has shipped two genuinely programmable surfaces on top of the email product: Client Scripting for in-inbox workflow logic, and a CLI for admin and user automation. Earlier in March, MCP integration landed so AI agents can act on inboxes by context rather than condition-and-rule heuristics. The rest of the changelog is an Admin Reports content series and competitive positioning around AWS WorkMail's shutdown.
Zoho is pushing email past the static inbox metaphor toward a scriptable, agent-addressable surface. Client Scripting, CLI, and MCP stack into a single thesis — email gets programmed by people and by agents — with the Admin Reports series doing parallel work to make the security and governance story enterprise-credible. The framing is openly competitive: WorkMail refugees and other consolidation targets are the audience.
Expect Client Scripting and MCP to converge, so agents can invoke user-defined inbox scripts as tools, paired with deeper admin observability to keep the enterprise migration pitch coherent.
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