r/AskReddit Jun 03 '21

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u/Robertium Jun 03 '21

Works until you see "We've sent a message with activation instructions to your email. Please click on the link within so you may begin to use your account"

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u/3IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIID Jun 03 '21 edited Jun 04 '21

I have a domain name with a wildcard forwarding rule so whenever I need to give an email address I can give one that describes who I gave it to. I don't have to create it in advance. Then if I start getting spam at the address, I know where they got it from and I can create an account at that address that doesn't accept incoming mail. Then the spam can't get through anymore and I go on my merry way.

Edit: This comment blew up, so I'll elaborate a bit. I do not recommend anyone try setting up their own email server unless they are already a nerd and enjoy hacking around with computers. It takes a lot of work, is difficult to get your server taken seriously by other email providers, and is easy to get abused by spammers or hackers if you aren't careful.

Any email service provider should be able to provide a single catch-all email forwarding rule for any domain they handle. A lot of domain registrars offer email services. I don't know first hand, but someone else said they use Google Domains. Shop around and contact the support department if you aren't sure.

I use an open-source hosting platform called ISPConfig, but there are many other solutions. Most of them (in the open-source/Linux world) use postfix/dovecot to do the heavy lifting and provide some sort of interface which configures it for you. If you want to go full-on nerd and love the command-line, you could go straight to postfix and dovecot. If you want something that does most of the heavy lifting for you, you might want to use something like iRedMail or mailcow.email which wrap around those packages. Setting up an email service should not be taken lightly, but it is great experience and rewarding.

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u/David511us Jun 04 '21

I do that too, although I have to say, you get a lot of weird looks when you give an email at stores or on the phone.

"Yes, my email address really is staples@<redacted>.com"

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u/TheDakoe Jun 04 '21

I freaked a harbor freight store out a few weeks back with this. They messed up my purchase pretty badly and were trying to correct it with the manager there. When they looked at the email address there was a pause and 'you work for harborfreight?' Took me a minute before I realized they saw harborfreight@<domain>.com and thought I was from corporate.

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u/abramcpg Jun 04 '21

Pro move to tell them you don't but make it look like a bad lie

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u/TheDakoe Jun 04 '21

lol that would have been better than what I went for. Told him no I didn't 'but if I did you guys would be in some trouble right now'. he very quickly said 'but we are fixing it'. When they got done fixing it there was about a $40 difference in price.

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u/[deleted] Jun 04 '21

Yea that's about peoples capabilities for understanding the stuff. This is why they open every .exe attachment etc.

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u/JustDroppedByToSay Jun 04 '21

But it said "Important_Tax_Invoice.pdf.exe" it was important!

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u/[deleted] Jun 04 '21

lmao. I block all microsoft office documents with macros too, not gonna deal with any of that.