this post was submitted on 27 Sep 2023
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I'd really like to use the service and in fact I wish I'd been using it forever. But I want to do it right and self host it. It's just, maybe the most complicated thing I've ever seen.

Does it require self hosting your own email server as well? If you already own a domain, does that make the process easier?

is Anon Addy the only service like this? Also I'd love to integrate with bitwarden, so when I create a new account for some website, I can automatically create a new email address. (idk if there's any reason to do this, just think it could be cool)

To piggyback further, I've been wondering if having my own domain would help me get around my double nat issue not allowing me to make reverse proxies.

Thanks in advance to the community!

Edit:

I think I have a solution! Bitwarden actually has these integrations already and it's relatively new. duckduck go just doesn't work. I tried forwardemail and that site is filled with dark patterns so you think the free account is worth a damn until you're already invested time into setting it up. At the last minute it tells you you can't use it with bitwarden on the free account. The others are at least up front about their pricing. forwardemail.net doesn't even have a pricing page. Sending emails from the masked addresses is also paywalled. pretty much all functionality on forwardemail.net is paywalled, but they hide it from you the best they can, so fuck that company.

I spoke too soon. There's no option that isn't paid. So I guess back to self hosting anonaddy

Edit: I finally got duckduckgo email working with bitwarden integration. It now generates a random email for me automatically!

Edit edit: Found a good solution:

There are two solid solutions I think for this problem: Bitwarden + SimpleLogin integration. Ends up being about $40/year. The SimpleLogin integration is more limited as it just generates a generic hash. Pass gives you more flexibility - it adds the domain followed by a hash. It's cheaper by a few bucks if you pay per year.

or

Proton Pass ($48/year, or $36/year if paying for 2 years, or if you have proton unlimited ($8/mo), it's included What' nice is that the email address alias generator is built in and has a lot more options. It's cheaper if you pay for 2 years or already have proton unlimited. Both have stellar track records.

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[–] [email protected] 7 points 1 year ago (1 children)

Isnt anon addy the kind of thing that works best for not self-hosting? You'd need a domain, which is registered directly to you, so not anonymous, and youd end up getting all the spam emails sent to your mx server, so you would have to deal with that?

[–] MonkCanatella 3 points 1 year ago (1 children)

Have you tried self hosting it or know what goes into it? Do you know of any alternatives? The functionality I'm after is being able to use a different email address per service I sign up for and tracking that with bitwarden, then forwarding all emails to my main email.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 year ago (1 children)

You can use a “+” symbol to make simple sub-aliases that all get sent to your normal email. If my email is [email protected] any email sent to [email protected] will be sent to the inbox of [email protected] but the email address is was sent to will be listed at [email protected]. Bitwarden can do this automatically when you generate a login.

If your email alias is ever leaked or gets used for spam you can just block all emails going to that alias.

[–] MonkCanatella 1 points 1 year ago (2 children)

I'm pretty sure most spammers know to strip the + sign away at this point. I wouldn't trust that to truly work

[–] [email protected] 2 points 1 year ago

Most of the spam mails I receive simply greet me by the exact part in front of the @. I think you are too confident in regards of „most“ spammer‘s capabilities.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 year ago

wow didn't even think of that. embarrassing :(