Also, do you use disposable emails? What for?
I have a lot of emails made with simple login and I use the same one only for three websites. Then I get all emails forwarded to the same email, and an email for personal use (family, work, friends…) also forwarded to that one. So something like this:
o o o o personal
\ | / /
| /
| /
o
I use mailbox.org with my own domain and set up a catch-all so that all mails arrive in a single inbox. When I have to sign up somewhere I usually use their domain as the local part, e.g. example.org@mydomain.tld. That way I can easily identify who fucked up and can simply block all mails with that recipient.
I have an old gmail that I can’t quite get rid of yet, one company address for one of my jobs and one disroot that I use for everything else. I just added 3 accounts in Claws Mail and it gives a pretty good UX
I use one e-mail address for personal communication and one different address for each online registration.
I use a self-hosted spamgourmet for that purpose that redirects all the e-mails to my personal one.
Spamgourmet is super cool for that use as each e-mail is created on the fly and only accepts 3 e-mails by default. You can customize the number of accepted e-mails or trusted senders, …
I sometimes use a spamgourmet address for people I don’t know or trust.
I use throwaways sometimes for services that forces account creation. Otherwise I use the same email everywhere and make sure to not receive spam junk.
While we’re at it, I got a little tip for you:
You can put + after your username and whatever after. So if your email is
example@mail.com
You can putexample+macrohard@mail.com
and the email will appear in your regular account. This way you’ll know macrohard has been doing shady things with your mail when you receive spam from this address.
It also allows you to creat multiples accounts with one mail account if the service don’t prevent the trick.
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Postale.io for my domains. They are solid and super inexpensive! SimpleLogin for registrations. Gmail for legacy emails
I’m trying to separate mail accounts between stuff (online shopping, socials/casual, work, personal) to see how it goes. Most of them go through a single client anyway but at least I know which account I have to read right away and which I can skip for a day or two. I’m going with ProtonMail for personal (banking, health, etc.), infomaniak for general use, and gmail (sigh) for work
For sites that I don’t trust and some newsletters I use aliases with SimpleLogin.
I use Mailinator for most throw away emails. I still use my old Gmail for tax stuff, things related to bills and whatnot. My personal email is hosted on Posteo. My conversations with friends are the only thing I feel need to be kept from the 5 eyes.
i use gmail for spammy things that take up lots of space cuz it works with thunderbird. protonmail for important things (easy access w/o 2FA)
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i use simplelogin it’s been great
Yeah I use them for dumb things like signing up for games or other websites I don’t really trust. If they get breached or sell my data there’s less on the line
I’m using temp-mail.org whenever I can, for non-temporary stuff I use SimpleLogin forwarded to my private e-mail address which I also use for personal contacts
Recently started using Anonaddy aliases + my old personal e-mail which it’s still used on more important sites and for personal emails. 😁
Oh, right, there is also outlook for school 🙄
I use fastmail with several different domains associated.
- Personal email shared with friends and family
- Professional email - not my work but the one associated with my Linkedin and such
I have a custom domain just for signing up to online services. For me, this domain is completely separate and I never use it for anything else. Like nachtigall, I use a naming scheme and a catch-all address. My naming scheme uses their domain plus a random bit like so,
twitter.6cruzbms@mydomain.tld
.There are two main benefits to using such a scheme imo. First, it’s harder for data aggregators to collate and cross reference me across the web by using an email address. Second, it acts as a hacked canary and it’s easy to identify the source of suspicious or problematic emails.
The random characters are a pretty good idea to increase security too. Without that part it is easy to figure out what address I use for each service. With the random bits it adds another unknown factor that should make brute force attacks slightly harder. Gonna adopt that too, thanks for the idea!