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What’s your view concerning changing a long existing email address

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https://sigforum.com/eve/forums/a/tpc/f/320601935/m/1680029505

January 13, 2024, 12:01 PM
ensigmatic
What’s your view concerning changing a long existing email address
quote:
Originally posted by mark123:
quote:
Originally posted by ensigmatic:
quote:
Originally posted by mark123: Yeah, it’s the same idea as tagged email addresses. I don’t use tags as I have unlimited forwarders.
To each their own, but, by your own admission, by doing that you've kind of limited where you can go for a new email provider.
I’m not sure I understand what you mean.
Well, the instant point was you earlier wrote you were limited as to where you could go for an email provider because some (many? most?) don't/won't support unlimited email forwarders (probably actually email aliases, btw).
quote:
Originally posted by mark123:
I’m not sure tagging offers the same security as using unique email addresses.
Depends upon one's definition of "security" and the context.

It does offer equivalent security in that:
quote:
Originally posted by mark123:
Anyone that got the Epik list surely stripped out the tags.
One would think, but, oddly enough: They did not. At least not in email I've seen. (N.B.: Or maybe some did. I get so much spam/scam email to my unadorned email address there's no way to know.)
quote:
Originally posted by mark123:
Unless you specifically don’t allow email addresses without a tag to be delivered.
In my case: Email to tagged email addresses is "pre-approved," bypassing all but the most strictly necessary anti-spam/-abuse checks. Unadorned email has to run the whole gauntlet. So kind of: Yes.

I will concede your point that entirely different email username parts for each contact is somewhat better for avoiding spam/scam email, because, as you noted, a spammer/scammer need only strip the tag to get a (probably) deliverable email address when relying on tagging.

(Though, it just occurred to me, a compromise solution may be best: A single email alias to which you don't accept delivery w/o a tag. Hmmm... Perhaps I'll play with that today?)

I could have all the email aliases in the world I wanted. That's way too much trouble, to my way of thinking, and would limit my options should I ever choose to go to hosted email provisioning.

Then there's my wife, who I've taught to also use tagged email addresses.



"America is at that awkward stage. It's too late to work within the system,,,, but too early to shoot the bastards." -- Claire Wolfe
"If we let things terrify us, life will not be worth living." -- Seneca the Younger, Roman Stoic philosopher
January 13, 2024, 12:08 PM
mark123
Yeah, if you could reject all untagged email and only accept specific tags, that’s pretty secure. I like it. Easily done with regular expressions.
January 13, 2024, 12:30 PM
ensigmatic
quote:
Originally posted by mark123:
Yeah, if you could reject all untagged email and only accept specific tags, that’s pretty secure. I like it. Easily done with regular expressions.
Just tested it Smile

Created an email alias. Added "alias+<anything>@example.com" to the pre-approved list. Added "alias+compromisedtag@example.com" to the "compromised" list and "alias@example.com" to the reject list.

Works as designed Smile

The order the lists are checked is critical. The server checks "compromised," "pre-approved," "reject," in that order.



"America is at that awkward stage. It's too late to work within the system,,,, but too early to shoot the bastards." -- Claire Wolfe
"If we let things terrify us, life will not be worth living." -- Seneca the Younger, Roman Stoic philosopher
January 14, 2024, 07:43 AM
henryaz
quote:
Originally posted by mark123:
Service@domain_name.com is a good idea. Thanks.

Contact@domain_name.com also seems to be a good idea.

I have 4 domain names registered, the main one since 1997, and that is where my primary email sits. I have probably 3 dozen or so alias addresses that all forward to my primary account. Each domain has status@, which seems to be a benign address.



When in doubt, mumble