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On Fri, 6 Jan 2006 16:13:43 -0600, "Vanguard"
wrote: |Instead I use e-mail aliases. Right now I use Sneakemail. They have free |accounts where you can define an unlimited number of e-mail aliases. The |free accounts have lower quota (size of message, how many bytes per month) |than the paid accounts but then I don't get much traffic through the |aliases. If an alias starts to get spammed, I kill it and that traffic is |zero thereafter. Because the alias was created and divulged only to one |recipient, I know exactly who betrayed me. For example, if you want to |download demo videos of games from Gamespot.com, you need to provide a valid |e-mail address. Aliases are valid e-mail addresses so you will get their |confirmation e-mail to complete the registration process. Everytime that I |have opened an account at Gamespot.com, spam starts coming after around 3 |days. Although CNet control Gamespot, I haven't had a problem with aliases |divulged to CNet when, for example, wanting to submit a user review of |software available at their download.com site. So it is Gamespot alone at |CNet that is farking over its users. You don't even have to kill the alias. |You could just disable it. You can configure it to automatically delete any |mails delivered to it (so the sender doesn't get a rejection). If you use a |simple forwarding service to hide your e-mail address, any reply to a |forwarded message will go through your own mail server and not back through |the forwarding service (i.e., they forward to you but do not provide SMTP |service that specifically goes through your alias account). Any mails sent |through a Sneakemail account have the headers setup so on a reply your |message goes back through their server, all headers get stripped so only |their headers are in the delivered mail, and it looks like it came from your |account at Sneakemail. I have free accounts at Mailshell (tested beta vers but dont create any new addys) & SpamGourmet.com which call themselves disposable but act like aliases as u describe above. I do assign a new addy to each recipient altho u dont have to so I know who spammed me. I do remove myself b4 letting an addy expire. I'll look at Sneakemail & compare to to 2 above. TY 4 tip. 1 of the 1st addys to get spammed was not an alias but a 'base' RR addy that I swear only RR & Computer Assoc(EZ AV) had. Bummer. Luckely creating a new RR addy & redirecting all aliases there is fairly easy. So I like aliases,aks's or whatever the proper terminology is alot. Thanks- bye- Larry Any advise is my attempt to contribute more than I have received but I can only assure you that it works on my PC. GOOD LUCK. |
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On Mon, 9 Jan 2006 01:39:35 -0600, "Vanguard"
wrote: |I didn't see any free e-mail alias service at mailshell.com. Didn't see |anything about e-mail aliases but just anti-spam stuff. What does |mailshell.com offer that is actually free? Only free 4 beta testers like me but I dont have all capabilities of paid version. | |SpamGourmet.com uses the concept of adding a string to your username as |though that constitutes hiding your e-mail address. You divulge an e-mail |address like: | | | |where someword is a random string and x is the number of times it can be |used. Otherwise, the rest of it is just like defining a disposable webmail |account anywhere else. I saw no mention of how they protect you when you |reply to a mail sent through their alias. It seems a one-way service: they |hide the destination e-mail address but only for inbound mails. If you |reply to a message that came through their alias, you are still sending that |reply through your own mail server, not theirs. When replying to mails |received through a Sneakemail alias, yes, they will go through your mail |server but the destination for that reply is to Sneakemail which then strips |out all the headers and adds Sneakemail-only headers so your mail looks like |it originated from there. Services that hide you only for inbound mails are |nothing more than forwarding services, like Bigfoot.com. They don't accept |any e-mails from you, including any replies you make to those mails received |through an alias or forwarding account. Any email sent from RR addy using OE 1st goes to Mailshell or Spamgourment server & has no mention of my RR addy in header when the recipient gets them. Both have ways of blocking addys composed by anyone but me. I looked at Sneakemail briefly & thought it would be time consuming to have to go to their site every time I need a new addy. Both of mine require me to do that only if I an sending the very 1st email for a new addy- like when I click mail-to link. I use Gmail to send email to TS addy's from existing Mailshell addys cause u cant send attachments from email composed at Mailshell (it does forward them tho). I think any of 3 does better job with spam than any filtering can but can be challenging for some to use. Bye- Larry Any advise is my attempt to contribute more than I have received but I can only assure you that it works on my PC. GOOD LUCK. |
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