(no title)
cornflake23 | 2 years ago
I would love to know who sold them my data though. That would allow me to stop the flow more effectively before I felt okay deleting at the terminal data broker.
cornflake23 | 2 years ago
I would love to know who sold them my data though. That would allow me to stop the flow more effectively before I felt okay deleting at the terminal data broker.
sircastor|2 years ago
EvanAnderson|2 years ago
hnbear|2 years ago
Previously I was using service@service.myname.com, and I realized that's leaking a bit too much info.
So, I bought genericname.com and switched to using service@service.genericname.com
Slightly less leakage, although I really doubt anyone is looking. I still have occasional issues with companies rejecting emails with their name in them, but that's easy to work around.
It's great in stores when they ask you to sign up for something and you give them an email that's obviously their name. Raises some eyebrows but most people working the checkout really don't care. A few just comment that it's cool, most are skeptical.
It's all hosted on fastmail and routes via wildcards to my central inbox anyway.
freeAgent|2 years ago
jackfoxy|2 years ago
Everyone should have their own email domain, and an agent that also serves as your email client will generate a proper looking (for some definition of that) email address within your domain for every new correspondent.
Now, whenever you see your identity (email address) associated with anything at all you can determine the original source.
electric_mayhem|2 years ago
There’s commercial services now which make it easy, but I’ve been doing it for decades now. The joys of running your own inbound mail server.
Makes it easy to know who’s either sold your data or had their db liberated, and block them.
WhackyIdeas|2 years ago
cornflake23|2 years ago
I’ve been slowly switching to web/desktop based alternatives- those too have their issues (eg correlating all the traffic out of my single home NAT’d IP address.
Mulling deleting apps off my phone as well, but many non-app “mobile” experiences are completely unusable.