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Joined 1 year ago
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Cake day: November 7th, 2024

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  • Agreed, this is where I’m at as well.

    What I’ve had in place for the last decade or more made sense to me once upon a time, but it’s over engineered and of limited usefulness.

    Despite the potential technical solutions offered in other comments, I’ve resolved to go through and clean up my email history, including deleting stuff I no longer need and reconfiguring how I assign labels to incoming messages in gmail in order to make sense to my current self and play nice with the folder system, which seems to be more industry standard anyway.



  • In case anyone else out there is unaware, the “paid” tier for Osmand is unlockable for free to OSM contributors, meaning if you make a habit of contributing edits to OSM, then all you’d have to do is link to your OSM account within Osmand settings. Not to dissuade anyone from contributing financially, just sayin’ b/c I think that is a nice little perk for editors from the Osmand team.

    I personally prefer CoMaps (forked from Organic Maps), the UI is a little more intuitive to me than Osmand.









  • I forward those emails to an address which is random. For example: udhxhdjeiwk@example.com.

    Can you elaborate on the benefit of using a random string for your secret/true inbox? Is it so that if it’s ever compromised you can just spin up a new random string as your new inbox, point all your aliases to the new one, and burn the old one?

    Each alias looks like this: company_name-[eight random character/numbers]@example.com.

    Same question, how do the random characters after the company name benefit you? Is it so that if you want (or need) to continue using that particular service after a data leak, then at least you can update your profile to company_name-[different set of random characters]?



  • Makes sense. Follow-up question: Is there any particular reason why you use the email+hfu2sb5d@example.com or email+ebay@example.com as opposed to just hfu2sb5d@example.com or ebay@example.com?

    If I understand correctly, the plus sign helps you see which organization has compromised your info, but the drawback of the plus sign is that a savvy spammer can figure out what your true email address is (the part before the plus sign), whereas aliases such as hfu2sb5d@example.com or ebay@example.com conceal your true email address.

    Am I thinking about this correctly?

    ETA I’ve also encountered sites where a plus sign in the email address is disallowed, which is another downside of the plus sign approach.