this post was submitted on 10 Sep 2023
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Privacy
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Theres plenty of good reason to keep your alias provider separate from your email provider.
The first being you can lift and shift to another email provider very easily.
Secondly if something happens to your account you don't lose the lot.
Thirdly, just get a domain with alias provider and it matters not what email provider you use ever.
All alias providers I have seen (including SimpleLogin) allow arbitrary target/"backing" mailboxes.
Personal domains are nice for "important stuff" that should be tied to your real person.
One of the features of mail aliasing services is it to provide pseudonymity which you cannot achieve if the domain literally contains your real name.
I have a pseudo domain that has none of my info on it.
It's something along the lines of "thisisspam.com" that forwards to my personal email accounts.
The point is, since I and not the service control my addresses I can take them anywhere.
Problem is that this domain (whether it includes your real name or not) is still related to your person as you are the sole user.
If you created accounts at Google, Amazon and Facebook using a schema of
[email protected]
, don't you think they'd be able to tell it's the same person who created those accounts?With the likes of
[email protected]
,[email protected]
and[email protected]
, that identification vector is simply ruled out.This is going to be controversial, but if I was a user of these three scummy sites what you say above isn't the hill I'm willing to die on or care about.
However I have half a dozen domains, I could quite easily add one or two more for dumb shit like this if I wanted to.