My problem with this is that it conflicts with identity ownership. If I give every company someunqiueaddress@someservice.com, I no longer have the ability to switch email providers, especially if I only decide to switch after losing my someservice.com account. If I give every company someuniqueaddress@mydomain.org, then I’m still ID’d by mydomain.org. Maybe in a way that automatic linkers miss, for now, but maybe not: how hard is it, really, to automatically determine with decent confidence that mydomain.org is a personal domain, and strip the entire username and subdomain part in the existing normalization step?
It can be some secret mydomain.org, but that still links all my profiles together.
I could buy a different domain for every company, but that’s cost prohibitive, and also piercing WHOIS privacy is just another data sharing agreement away.
Posting this because I’m hoping somebody has a better answer.
> Change the forwarding address
Every unique, random address you create with Hide My Email is forwarded to the same email address. You can change the forwarding address at any time.
On iCloud.com, go to Account Settings, then click Manage in the Hide My Email section.
Scroll to the “Forward to” section, then choose a different address.
The “Forward to” section is below your list of active addresses and above your inactive addresses.
what many sites don’t let you change is the address associated with your account, but that’s not the fault of the email provider.
It can be some secret mydomain.org, but that still links all my profiles together.
I could buy a different domain for every company, but that’s cost prohibitive, and also piercing WHOIS privacy is just another data sharing agreement away.
Posting this because I’m hoping somebody has a better answer.