I already use Tuta as my email provider. I already have a domain I can use with it (bought privately). What privacy implemcations does it come with.

The main reason is because I would like to be able to keep the same email address for longer and not have to change when/if I change providers.

  • Dust0741@lemmy.world
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    1 day ago

    I do this. Its great because of catchall emails and the ability to make one address per merchant. Then if a company leaks your email or gets hacked, you can simply change the email from hacked-company@domain.tld to hacked-company2@domain.tld and block the old address.

    It also is good for ownership as you said. If Tuta gets purchased by Google (for example), then you can simply pivot to any of the many other email providers and not rely on a company being not evil.

  • solrize@lemmy.ml
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    2 days ago

    Google gets lots of your email either way, since many of your correspondents will be on gmail. I’ve been getting domains mostly from porkbun.com which offers free whois privacy. namesilo.com has it too.

      • drspod@lemmy.ml
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        1 day ago

        They front a huge percentage of the internet, so you can pretty much guarantee that all of the three-letter agencies have their fingers in Cloudflare’s infrastructure, whether they cooperate willingly or not.

        If you care about your privacy you should avoid these kind of infrastructure monopolies, since they are such a juicy target.

      • Scott@sh.itjust.works
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        2 days ago

        Used CF for years, email routing is neat but they aren’t a inbox provider. They just give a way to send email to another inbox.

  • Lucien [he/him]@mander.xyz
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    2 days ago

    Domain registrars are required to collect your real information and display it in the Whois database. Many registrars offer a “Whois privacy” service where they put their name and address in the database instead of yours, most charge a fee for this. That’s one thing to keep in mind.

    • MangoPenguin
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      1 day ago

      The fee has been gone for awhile now, they’re required to give it to you for free with a domain.

  • flatbield@beehaw.org
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    2 days ago

    Your own domain is not great for privacy though like others have said the registrar can hide your info at least from whois. If you already have a domain lookup the whois record and see what it says. Presumably even with whois privacy your identity is probably discoverable.

    Custom domains are not great for deliverability too. Though mostly mine is fine. Sometimes Yahoo and ATT manged accounts give me delivery issues.

    What your own domain is good for is nice, long term, and portable addresses. Also for many cheap addresses. I get something like 30 email accounts with my basic Namecheap cPanel account for about $25 per year.

    • MangoPenguin
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      1 day ago

      Instead of 30 addresses it’s generally easier to just enable catch-all on your primary address. That way you’re not manually creating each new address.

    • Lyra_Lycan
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      1 day ago

      Mine was fine until I upgraded my broadband. Under my new service the ISP doesn’t allow their IPs to be taken off of the Zen spamlist, so I’m pretty much fucked over and at the behest of the ISP

      Edit: How do you have a limit? You outsource? I self host so my limit is my hardware.

      Edit 2: Ah I see, there are services that charge for their hardware.

      • flatbield@beehaw.org
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        2 days ago

        Yes. I do not use them all, but I can and my cPanel shared hosting only costs $25 per year. I can use web hosting part too if I want. It is all included. The above cost does not include the domain name itself.

        See: https://www.namecheap.com/hosting/shared/

        Edit: Looks like after first year it will be about $50/year.

  • catloaf@lemm.ee
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    2 days ago

    You could find a provider that lets you bring your own domain, and maintain that instead.