• @[email protected]
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    111 month ago

    For e-mails, you can just get firefox relay with your own subdomain and generate infinite e-mail masks for 1$ a month. I usually take “[email protected]” for example. It’s pretty great because you just make the masks on the fly.

    • @[email protected]
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      71 month ago

      I’ve been doing this for several years now (not specifically that service, since I have my own domains). It’s really nice knowing exactly who sold your email to the spam bots, because it’s right in the address. Super easy to block once that happens.

      • @[email protected]
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        21 month ago

        Yeah, I bought some Chinese batteries a while ago and they sold/leaked my info to a dozen other scam companies. None of which I was able to unsubscribe from. Just ticked a box to disable the email and that was the end of that. If I hadn’t, they would have been blowing up my inbox for the rest of eternity with no way to stop it or know where it came from.

      • @[email protected]
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        1 month ago

        addy.io is another service which I’m using with my own domain. I know there exists a third, but I can’t remember the name.

    • @[email protected]
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      1 month ago

      Yup.

      If you use the same email everywhere, they can try brute-forcing the password by using the email instead of your username. Give them less to go on. $1/month is absolutely worth it to prevent an important account from getting hacked.

      • @[email protected]
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        41 month ago

        For users of Gmail, I can confirm this works and you can even set it up so that address+nameofshop goes to a folder called “nameofshop.”

        You can also apparently add a dot anywhere before @gmail.com and still receive the email. I haven’t tried this one, but the last time I mentioned this someone said it was part of the email standard, so presumably it works.

        I don’t know of tricks specifically of this vein for proton mail, but I do know you can setup a catch-all address so, for example, something addressed to [email protected] goes instead to [email protected].

        I’ve not tried SimpleLogin, but apparently it offers similar functionality.

      • @[email protected]
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        31 month ago

        I didn’t know that actually. They can still deduce your actual email address from that, but for the identification of the culprit that would work as well.