It worked, some of my friends were using it, but I never really improved on it although it was always in the back of my mind to do so at some point. So December 2020 seemed like a good time to do this.
I completely rebuilt it, but again, did not really expect that there will come much of it, it is really just for myself. It seemed that the problem I was solving was really just a problem that I had.
But then Apple announced their Hide My Email (albeit just on Apple devices) service at WWDC 21. I was like: "Hey, if Apple thinks there is something here, maybe other people would start thinking about it too."
I want to continue building on this; I've had some ideas (browser extensions, Mobile, business plan, etc. etc.) that I want to implement sooner rather than later. There is a small fee for using the service and I believe that there may now be some people, non-Apple or otherwise users, who would start to see the value of this and be willing to pay for this service.
I have not tried Apple's Hide My Email, but I think what makes Mailphantom different is that:
1. You can reply to an email; and 2. You can also add your own custom domain which only you will have access to
But the fact that Apple thinks email privacy is important, made me think there may be something here.
I am sure this does not answer your question, but hope that helps with some context.
Also, can you prove that's not happening?
I mean I do not have an easy way to show anyone. But I have thought about how to deal with such a request, and my thinking was to have a video call with someone and show. For the moment that is how I would solve that. Not ideal but ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
FYI, after years of running this experiment I’ve found that vendors don’t tend to share their email address lists. One of the only exceptions that comes to mind is someone scraping my LinkedIn email for e-commerce marketing.
My take-away was: always proxy ebay/paypal accounts behind another mail provider, and be ready to change those emails when they get compromised.
Yes this service is not a new thing, and people come up with different ways to solve this problem.
> FYI, after years of running this experiment I’ve found that vendors don’t tend to share their email address lists.
I pretty much agree with you. But it happens, and I do feel better knowing even if they do, I needn't worry :)
Add `.patch` to the end of the URL when viewing a commit to view the full commit, including user information. E.g., ‘https://github.com/<repo>/commit/<hash>.patch’.
2 Redirect all incoming mail from that account to your already existing, personal account
3 Set a filter so all redirected mail gets a label and is archived automatically
4 Only look at that label when you need to
You're welcome, guys!
Kind of a silly preference maybe because it's still easy to do manually, but it would make the paid service more attractive I think.
Great for a particular watch store that LOVES to sell your data.
But probably enough for most people :)