Long time back I used to use a spam email whenever I needed one. Then services started declining emails from those services, so I made a temp Gmail I used for everything. But I’m not comfortable with how much I use that.
SimpleLogin,
to generate email aliases for permanent personal accounts and forward the mails to an undisclosed private main mail adres:
https://simplelogin.io/Temp-Mail,
to generate email adresses for temporary throw-away use cases:
https://temp-mail.org/aimple login is a blessing
I use https://10minutemail.com/
If it’s blocked and I don’t care enough use my normal email, the site isn’t worth it imo.
I use Firefox Relay (@mozmail.com) and so far I’ve been able to use it everywhere I wanted to.
Don’t you have to pay for the premium to get more than a few redirects?
What do you mean , you get 5 free rekat addresses, you can use it, however many times don’t you*?
No it’s 5 free emails rerouted, you have to subscribe after that which is why I bailed. If I misunderstood that I’ll have to look at them again.
Okay what I do is I use one email id for multiple crap things , so that way one type of crap comes only via one email id
Sure, I may have been confused when I started doing it then, unless I’m misremembering I tried to have it send to the same Firefox alias and it said I only had 3 left after the 2nd email.
You do. I roughly pay $1/month.
Sign up for a domain at a registrar and get hosted email. Setup a catchall address (as in anything @yourcomain.com gets delivered. Make up addresses as needed. By setting to companyyouresigningupwith@yourdomain.com each time you know which companies sold your info.
That’s what I do with Google Domains.
I’ll just add heavy emphasis to properly configure this, because otherwise anyone can use your domain as a catch-all host.
Which is how scammers hijack domains for sending spam and other content.
I think you’re thinking of an open relay, not a catchall mailbox.
How about duckduckgo’s email alias service? It allows you to send and receive without exposing your actual email.
What might be a deal-breaker is that you can only reply to others’ emails, others must send something to the
@duck.com
address firstYou don’t need to wait.
The format is
address_at_provider.com_id@duck.com
for sending emails.oh you’re right lol, thanks
I like Addy as it allows to create mail aliases which relay to your real mail. So you cen delete the alias as soon as it gets spammed.
If the free tier of the website is to restrictive for your uses, Addy is hosted by other FOSS supporting platforms and their limits vary.
One thing to keep in mind is that if you say that your email address is at some throwaway email site, that throwaway email site has access to your email and can probably pretend to be you, can probably get control of your accounts elsewhere, as email is often used as a way to authenticate someone in the event of a forgotten password. That may not matter if you’re just going to sign up and use a site once and then forget about it, but I’d be more-hesitant about using it for anything where you intend to use the thing on an ongoing basis or where there’s anything sensitive associated with the thing.
Honestly, this would be a useful service for ISPs to offer. Like, temporary email addresses. Mine gives me a number of them, plus webmail access to them, but it’s still a bounded number, not really intended to create one address for every possible remote location.
thinks
Abine.com used to provide proxy stuff for email addresses and credit card payments and SMS texts, hide your real identity from the other end, forward to your real one. They aren’t free, though, or at least their credit card masking service isn’t. I dunno if they’re still in business.
checks
Yeah, though it looks like they now brand that service as “IronVest”.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/IronVest
Another issue is that a lot of websites that want to harvest email addresses block throwaway email domains, use services that can identify them.
It also creates problems for some places that don’t care about harvesting email addresses, but do want to avoid bots, and try to block throwaway domains as well. For these, they make the assumption that an email address is an “expensive ID”, something that one can’t readily create a lot of. This is probably not a very good assumption, but, for example, a number of lemmy servers do this at sign-up. It’d be better to do something like a CAPTCHA or require a payment or something instead, IMHO…
The absolute best way costs a small amount of money.
First get a hosting plan. DreamHost has the “Shared Unlimited” plan for $13/mo. (Cheaper the first year, and cheaper if you pay for 1yr. or 3yrs.).
Next get a domain name. I recommend NameCheap. This costs like $14/yr. Most (but not all) domains have free anonymized registration.
You can then either use the mailbox space on your hosting or create forwarders to something like FastMail or Proton. Just make a new something@example.com address each time you need one. Blackhole it if it gets too much spam.
The hosting provider is unnecessary.
You can point the domain to proton mail or whatever email service you like. Then you can configure a wildcard so that all email sent to any address at that domain can go to a central email.
Then you can filter it and use rules to move or delete automatically. Minimal setup required, and nothing to do to “create” a new email address.
Yeah, you can do it that way. I mentioned the hosting in the case that they’d like to use mailboxes created on the hosting account rather than FastMail/Proton/etc.
And if that’s too many steps, Fastmail already has the ability to create masked emails!
Outlook allows an email address to be a day or so in service before they ask you for your personal info.
I often use Guerrilla Mail and mail.tm
Spamgourmet
deleted by creator
Here’s another just in case, maildrop.cc
mailinator.com was one of the originals, still seems to be working
I use Firefox Relay, the premium version is 12€/year and it’s easy to set up and use.
They have plans to offer phone number protection too in the future, I’m on the waitlist.