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| Email Comments, Questions and Miscellaneous Share your opinion of the email service you're using. Post general email questions and discussions that don't fit elsewhere. |
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#1 |
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Essential Contributor
Join Date: Oct 2003
Posts: 385
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seeking free email forwarding service with flexible addressing
I am looking for a free email forwarding service similar to endjunk.com with the following features:
- Free - Provides flexible addressing that I control (ie anythinghere@schmoe.endjunk.com or schmoe+anythinghere@endjunk.com), and ability to use the flexibility without having to set it up in advance at the forwarding site. - Minimum configuration - Not on every email providers black list (downside of endjunk) - Reasonable up time e4ward.com seems to be the best one so far. Any other suggestions? |
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#2 |
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The "e" in e-mail
Join Date: Sep 2005
Location: Hong Kong
Posts: 2,531
Representative of:
tls-mail.com |
akapost.com
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#3 |
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Intergalactic Postmaster
Join Date: Feb 2006
Location: EU
Posts: 5,016
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The free version of akapost offers only one 'anonymous' address redirected to/from one 'real' address.
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#4 |
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Moderator
Join Date: Mar 2002
Location: New York
Posts: 4,278
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Doesn't Gmail allow + addressing? (schmoe+anythinghere@gmail.com)
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#5 |
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Intergalactic Postmaster
Join Date: Feb 2006
Location: EU
Posts: 5,016
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#6 |
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Intergalactic Postmaster
Join Date: Jun 2002
Location: USA
Posts: 5,485
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The subdomain addressing method has long seemed far superior to "plus" addressing, since many don't seem to accept the latter as a properly formatted email address. In fact, just yesterday I was opening a new AOL email address for a friend, and decided to use one of my own Gmail addresses as a temporary alternate email address in the AOL signup form, using a plus address with the first name of the person I was opening the account for after the plus sign, but AOL wouldn't accept it as a "properly formatted" email address.
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#7 |
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Intergalactic Postmaster
Join Date: Feb 2006
Location: EU
Posts: 5,016
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Of course both 'plus addressing' and 'subdomain addressing' have a potential weakness: the real address can be trivially deducted from either by a malicious human (and by an automated address harvester as well).
From this point of view 'disposable' addresses, of the type offered e.g. by sneakemail, are very safe to use. |
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#8 |
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Essential Contributor
Join Date: Oct 2003
Posts: 385
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One small downer on gmail as filter and forwarder - Gmail does not give you the ability to filter based on bcc. So if you have a gmail filter to forward messages sent to schmoe+anything@gmail.com to schmoe@realaddress.com, it will only work if the message has the address on the TO or CC line, and not on the BCC line.
It is a very minor thing, certainly not a show stopper. |
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#9 | |
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Essential Contributor
Join Date: Oct 2003
Posts: 385
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Quote:
As an endjunk user (when the service is actually working), once every couple of months I would get pelted with hundreds of blowback spam messages, or whatever the term is for when your address is fraudulently used as the source of spam mail, and you receive hundreds of responses informing you that such-n-such address doesn't work, or such-n-such person was on vacation. Each of addresses that were used were addresses that I had never used before. The spammer knew that endjunk addresses could be twisted in any form. |
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#10 |
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Intergalactic Postmaster
Join Date: Jun 2002
Location: USA
Posts: 5,485
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While I didn't realize that it was blacklisted by many, as the OP said, endjunk.com has long had a security measure of a sort against "simple" harvesting by allowing the user to optionally set a "pass phrase", or a character string which must be in the user name part of every newly-created address in order for it to be accepted. While that doesn't provide absolute security against the creation of "bogus" addresses by a third party, it does make it somewhat more difficult. They also give the user the option to not allow email addresses to be created "on the fly", but only allowing addresses which are actually explicitly created by the user him/herself in the endjunk account interface.
The only problem is, these options don't seem to work reliably as advertised. ![]() Otherwise, while it may have its shortcomings, and like any "smaller" service, who knows how long it may continue to have a "limited" free level of service, another one which works similar to Endjunk (at least in being based on subdomain addressing rather than plus-addressing, and allowing the user to create addresses "on the fly", although their other features differ somewhat), is http://www.otherinbox.com/. |
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#11 | |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Jun 2004
Location: Vancouver, Canada
Posts: 116
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Quote:
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#12 | |
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Essential Contributor
Join Date: Oct 2003
Posts: 385
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Quote:
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#13 | ||
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The "e" in e-mail
Join Date: Sep 2005
Location: Hong Kong
Posts: 2,531
Representative of:
tls-mail.com |
Quote:
Quote:
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#14 |
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Intergalactic Postmaster
Join Date: Jun 2002
Location: USA
Posts: 5,485
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I've never considered plus-addressing of any great use in "cloaking" a Gmail address, but when I have used it (which has been very rarely) it has generally been more for the purpose of helping to expedite sorting, etc. via the filters.
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