

I wasn’t following this too closely, but read that the other day.
What struck me was the new owner not having an account on the forum. :/


I wasn’t following this too closely, but read that the other day.
What struck me was the new owner not having an account on the forum. :/


Doubt it. Tourists are free to use signal and travel to EU.
More like EU would block Signal servers, but I doubt thst too.


Yep. Went with A and initial tests work.
The only thing is being somewhat limited to incoming mail per month. I’ll just monitor it.
Plan B I thought should technically work too but hard to organise.
And it looks like mxroute, puremail, and migadu (spelling?) offer multiple accounts and mailboxes. But they arnt so privacy focused.
“Ask for me tomorrow, and you shall find me a grave man”


Thanks for the clarification.
So thinking outside the box would either of these work.
A) Point my domain to Anonaddy instead of mailbox.
Then I link the aliases to different recipients. So myname@custom to go to my fastmail and theirname@custom to go to their gmail.
B) Leave myname@custom pointing to mailbox. Then setup a subdomain and point that to anonaddy, and use their gmail as a recipient. They’d end up with theirname@mail.custom.


Is this via a rule, as in the email hits the inbox then gets sent on.
Or is it a setting when you configure the alias.
Where the email goes to fastmail then gets sent onto gmail, are you limited to replying from the gmail?


That’s the plan.
But anonaddy vs catchall/alias on own domain ?


Whats a magazine. I heard its like a blog but on trees?


Close source and the website 403s? Seems shady. https://github.com/livenettvapps/livenettv?tab=readme-ov-file
I came here for the memes, but I stay to learn.


Were some people concerned with Germany hosting and the way the right leaning party (Germany for Germans?) was gaining popularity? And something about their data views. Although maybe I was wrong.
From whwat I see though mailbox and posteo are the same.
As others commented Obtanium just swapped it over too. Everyone’s in the same boat, or rather on the same rug - without the rug.