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What are you guys using for e-mail nowadays?

I'm starting to get sick of all of the SPAM and incorrectly addressed e-mail that has been showing up in my GMail account over the past few months. Seeing a Gmail logo on that NSA PRISM presentation didn't sit all that well with me, either.

What are you guys using for e-mail nowadays? I'm hoping for something that is cheap, reliable, and not run by a major corporation that is selling my personal data to the highest bidder.
 
. Seeing a Gmail logo on that NSA PRISM presentation didn't sit all that well with me, either.

What are you guys using for e-mail nowadays? I'm hoping for something that is cheap, reliable, and not run by a major corporation that is selling my personal data to the highest bidder.

all email is captured by the NSA so proceed accordingly. encrypted is captured today, to be cracked in the future.

that said, have multipleaccounts...
 
Gmail, Tormail, Yahoo, Yandex, Outlook, Lavabit. I like Lavabit and Yandex best. Am anxiously awaiting Megamail, and StartPage mail.
 
I don't send emails ever, but I do have a terrorist gmail account that receives email from the middle east sometimes.
 
In fact just logged into that gmail account to find hilarity. I got invited to a get together in california from people I can only assume are jihadists, I got a french email, a receipt for limo service in new york, and various phishing emails. I've had this account since around the time gmail started and it's always attracted the oddest spam, honestly I don't even think half of it is bot spam but people who sincerely think they know who I am.
 
In fact just logged into that gmail account to find hilarity. I got invited to a get together in california from people I can only assume are jihadists, I got a french email, a receipt for limo service in new york, and various phishing emails. I've had this account since around the time gmail started and it's always attracted the oddest spam, honestly I don't even think half of it is bot spam but people who sincerely think they know who I am.

Yep... and that's what my inbox looks like every morning. I have about 100 SPAM messages, 10 SPAM messages the filter missed, about half a dozen messages meant for someone else, a couple of phishing e-mails, a few newsletters or marketing lists that someone signed up for using my address, and two or three of the e-mails might actually be from someone I know.

My hunch is that anyone else who has a five year old @gmail.com e-mail address that is only 6 or 7 characters long looks exactly like mine.

It's time for a new e-mail address. Something longer that doesn't end with @gmail.com, @outlook.com, or @yahoo.com to insure that it's not already on someone's system generated SPAM list.
 
Yep... and that's what my inbox looks like every morning. I have about 100 SPAM messages, 10 SPAM messages the filter missed, about half a dozen messages meant for someone else, a couple of phishing e-mails, a few newsletters or marketing lists that someone signed up for using my address, and two or three of the e-mails might actually be from someone I know.

My hunch is that anyone else who has a five year old @gmail.com e-mail address that is only 6 or 7 characters long looks exactly like mine.

It's time for a new e-mail address. Something longer that doesn't end with @gmail.com, @outlook.com, or @yahoo.com to insure that it's not already on someone's system generated SPAM list.

My Gmail gets tons of spam, but virtually every single one gets filtered. I bet less than 5 per year make it to my inbox. I think you just got unlucky, or perhaps you overused your address. Yahoo email is good for BS stuff. Try Yandex. It's Russian, so the NSA can't read it. Well, not until you mail someone with a Gmail account anyway :^D
 
Since Win 7 had no email client I went with Postbox, one time payment $10, not worth it though, it's filtering system sucks balls.
 
Since Win 7 had no email client I went with Postbox, one time payment $10, not worth it though, it's filtering system sucks balls.

My browser has an email client built-in, but I haven't even used it in years. Since my phone is automatically connected with my main gmail I don't really need anything else.
 
Yep... and that's what my inbox looks like every morning. I have about 100 SPAM messages, 10 SPAM messages the filter missed, about half a dozen messages meant for someone else, a couple of phishing e-mails, a few newsletters or marketing lists that someone signed up for using my address, and two or three of the e-mails might actually be from someone I know.

My hunch is that anyone else who has a five year old @gmail.com e-mail address that is only 6 or 7 characters long looks exactly like mine.

It's time for a new e-mail address. Something longer that doesn't end with @gmail.com, @outlook.com, or @yahoo.com to insure that it's not already on someone's system generated SPAM list.
I have a 6 character, early gmail account, and much of what you say is true for me too. Thankfully, I have gmail's filter trained well enough (you have to mark SPAM, SPAM, check SPAM for good mail, etc.) that I'll only end up with the occasional spam, and messages meant for someone else. You have to be careful on the messages meant for someone else, as lord knows that it might have been meant for you. Those are the trickiest, obviously.

Anyway, as someone above said... the NSA gets everything... so leave that out of your puzzle. For me, I would just train your gmail spam filter more/better.

-John
 
Iceteks.com (my own server/domain) and my local server fetches the mail every 7ish minutes and runs it through spamassassin then dumps to local mailboxes. I use Thunderbird with imap to access it.

I've been debating on keeping the mail online and having a web interface, but I kind of like the security of having it right in my own home.

My server is also in Canada so I probably don't have to worry about the NSA reading it other than mail originating from the US, or going to the US... which I suppose is a large portion.

For jihad related email we actually use an encrypted XMPP chat server hosted in Afghanistan with many encrypted tunnels throughout the globe. It also logs everything and through commands we can recover logs. We use it more like email, but we chose this route specifically to make real time communication easier. Data such as maps and blueprints of anti aircraft missiles are sent via encrypted TFTP on a series of servers in Saudi Arabia. The IPs change all the time so special commands in this chat allow us to get the current IP.
 
Gmail, Yahoo, and Outlook. My primary is Outlook because I stuck with it throughout the Hotmail era, and we use it at work, so it's familiar and consistent.
 
I have a hosted domain that includes web hosting and unlimited mailboxes. The cost is $5/month, plus the yearly fee for domain name registration. I mostly use the web hosting for image hosting. You can find even cheaper. The hosting service offers SpamAssassin filtering, which probably nixes 90%, but a significant amount still gets through. I use Thunderbird as my email client, which does some additional junk filtering of its own.

I keep three mailboxes. Each one has an address, but I never use that address, and instead use only aliases.

1. 'A' - Personal account used for friends, family, professional correspondence. Low risk of spam.

2. 'B' - Account used for things like forum memberships, online stores, responding to Craigslist. Medium risk of spam.

3. 'C' - Used for higher risk signups. Sketchy online stores, forums, etc. High risk.

The accounts allow me, after retrieving mail, to gauge their potential risk with regard to attachments and phishing schemes. I also have different 'real names' associated with each account in my email client. For 'A', my full name, for 'B', just my first name, and for 'C', something made up altogether. Needless to say, 'C' gets the most obnoxious spam, 'B' a bit less, and 'A' gets virtually none.

I keep multiple aliases (or 'forwarders') pointing at each account. If I find a particular email address begins to get a lot of crap, I just delete the forwarder. This means I never have to screw around with account settings in my email client. At worst, I have to re-register with some online stores or forums. Taking this approach to the extreme would be to create a new forwarder for every single signup, which would allow you to pinpoint the source of the spam (or the selling or leaking of your email address). That's a bit over the top, IMO, but I know people who do that.
 
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Yeah I've thought of doing the forwarder thing actually, would be interesting since you could catch organizations in the act.
 
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