The email address was and remains the most common identifier for an account on the Network. You may not have a phone number, but you must have a mailbox - this is an unwritten rule.
The presence of an email in itself reveals some information about you. First of all, this is alias, the name of the box, to the left of the symbol "@". The first and most obvious advice is not to choose your initials, surname and year of birth by name, unless it is a purely personal or work mailbox.
The second, but important tip is to carefully study the email provider. The most well-known free mail services "in pursuit" of email give you accounts in other products. This is especially true of Google and Yandex, as these companies conduct their business in a large number of other areas, and to provide you with a free box for what you will become passive consumer of a dozen other services -- their bread and butter.
To make it more difficult to find information about you, it is recommended to use email addresses wisely, using the technical ability to create their variations. According to RFCs, after the alias and before the @ sign, you can specify an additional suffix with "+", e.g [email protected]
. Emails to such an email address will be sent to the owner of [email protected]
, but from the point of view of sites, it will be a completely different email address. Google, in addition, has a feature: any dots in the alias are considered optional and work as suffixes after the “+”.
There are several usage schemes: a unique email address for each service, a unique email address for each “personality”, or use only for some services according to a scheme known only to you.
Additional benefits of using suffixes and dots are described here. Also, you can check the tool mailto_analyzer for analyzing of your email address exposure.
Separately, it is worth noting the habit of a large number of people to use a separate "garbage" mailbox for non-critical services and a variety of spam subscriptions. By itself, the separation of mailboxes is useful, but only if it is conscious (see above).
If you do not look into such a box, and the letters are lying there unread by thousands or more, then this is an important signal: figure out whether you really need this box. If not, then unsubscribe from all mailings and delete the accounts associated with it, to minimize the possibility of using this email address to collect information about you.
There are a large number of services that provide one-time mailboxes for 10-15 minutes. They are good for one-time registrations on sites where you get to for the first time and most likely will not use them anymore. Here we will consider those services that are created on random domains.
Services that generate plausible-looking aliases (first name. last name):
Other popular services:
Also on the Internet you can find services that make it possible to use your alias for a temporary mailbox. Such email addresses are convenient to use for services in which email should look plausible.
Examples of such services:
Services that allow you to forward emails use so-called "masks" that allow you to hide your real email address.
The principle of operation is very simple:
- Address-Mask receives an email
- A letter is being forwarded from this address to your real address
Example based on Firefox Relay:
First, a mask is provided that hides the real address.
Now, using this mask address, we can receive emails to our email address without showing it to the whole Internet.
Apple provides an opportunity for its users to use anonymized mailboxes
that function in the same way. They look like this: [email protected]
.
The section will be updated
Examples of services:
- SimpleLogin
- AnonAddy - generates addresses according to a template
*@ivanov.anonaddy.com
- Firefox Relay - generates random addresses on the domain
mozmail.com
- erine.email - makes addresses according to a template
*[email protected]
🥷 Advanced level
The section will be updated
The BitWarden password manager allows you to generate random "plus" aliases, as well as catch-all mailbox addresses and even forwarding mailboxes.
The section will be updated