Hey all, sorry if this was posted before, but lemmy search is hot dogshit at the moment, so I cannot really find anything relating to this topic.
Recently, I have been upgrading my email privacy bit by bit, and am in need of an email aliasing service / forwarding service. I have been looking online for a couple options and I’m currently down to 3 :
- Anonaddy
- Simplelogin
- Firefox Relay
Now, the main things I wish to know about each are, in your opinion, their pros and cons for a person with a pretty moderate-high threat model. Currently, these are the pros and cons that I have found :
-
Anonaddy (Lite Plan)
- Pros
- Cheap at $1/m (billed yearly)
- Can use Custom Domains (catchall, wildcard, etc)
- Stores failed deliveries (could be important if my mailbox is full or something)
- Open-source
- Cons
- Only 50 aliases using shared domains (custom subdomain are easily identifiable)
- Owned by 1 or 2 guys, so not guaranteed to last as long as a company would per se. Doesn’t matter much if I use a custom domain.
- Pros
-
Simplelogin
- Pros
- Unlimited aliases using shared domains
- Can use Custom Domains
- Owned by Proton (this is a pro in the sense of a guarantee that it will last a good bit of time)
- Open Source
- Cons
- Pricier at $2.5/m (billed yearly)
- I do not use proton, so compatibility could be a downside.
- Pros
-
Firefox Relay
- Pros
- Cheap at $1/m (billed yearly)
- Unlimited aliases using shared domain
- Owned by Mozilla (more than likely will last longer than Proton)
- Cons
- They use Amazon SES/AWS, though they have contract to protect customer information
- No Custom Domains
- Pros
I am currently leaning towards either Relay or Anonaddy because of their 2.5x cheaper price (which does add up $12/y vs $30/y), but am very curious as to which you prefer and why. I will not be using these services for anything important (bank, govt, insurance, etc) as those go through a custom domain strictly for those. Junk, random accounts which aren’t important, newsletters, … will go through the aliasing service.
Thank you in advance, if something wasn’t clear let me know.
Seems like a good usecase, and probably something I’d need to use. Thank you for the information man.