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In case anyone would like these benefits but doesn't want to actually run an email server: All you actually need to accomplish this is a domain name and a decent provider. Fastmail is what I use and it's been great for me.


To be even easier, you can just have Apple or Google hold your domain and provide mail.


That's not easier, that's the same but with a worse scale fit.

If you need free, you need free.

But if you can pay, you want to pay a vendor whose scale is such that you mean something to them while still being mature enough to rely on.

This applies to pretty much everything, not just email.

With Google and Apple, you service needs are overhead and with Google in particular, your value is entirely in them being able to monitor as much as they legally can about your activity.

With Fastmail, Protonmail, etc, you are a customer already and they're invested in making you a bigger happy cuatomer in the future. They have staff that will service your support tickets, you represent profit on their books, and the services they offer you are generally designed for your scale more precisely.


They mean getting a Gmail account


It’s risky to let your online identity be controlled by a single large provider. Distribute out the services you use as much as possible. Use a different email provider from your domain registrar, and different from the providers of any other online account you have.


I'm not 100% sure that that gets you wildcard email addresses that all point to the same inbox, but if they support that, sure!


Google has it, though I think you need the paid Workspace version? I’m paying around $15/month now ever since google killed the free tier for custom domains.


Not sure about Apple, but Google calls has that and calls it catch-all-routing.


I don’t know about Google, but I know iCloud supports domain wildcarding


Proxy address ie [email protected] you would use [email protected] and have rules to match that


It’s [email protected], and it’s a poor substitute for a dedicated domain. For one, every attacker knows about plus addressing and that those addresses are really all the same email account.


They still don't know what you put after the "+" to log into another service.




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