Your modus operandus means you cannot share your e-mail address whereas my spam filter is so good that the amount of false positives and false negatives is negligible.
> (They also have the side benefit of a little added security when someone hacks Site A's account database and tries to use the email addresses to log in to Site
Using a password manager plus randomly generated, complex passwords mitigates that problem entirely insofar that your accounts can be used on different websites.
Both our solutions do not mitigate the doxing issue. A way to deal with that is removing your personal details whenever they're unnecessary (e.g. changing/removing them after you ordered something). Artifacts might still remain though, and faking them is probably illegal. It can lead to issues as well. My mother always gives a fake DOB akin to her own when she doesn't trust it, or gives a slight variant of her name. Then she knows something is wrong. Pretty clever, esp before this century.
> Of course I can. I don't know what you're getting at.
I was referring to it as an adaptation of the way I do it.
Your way of doing it is introducing another hop/point of failure and either adds a subscription, or having your addressed e-mail public.
> Doesn't solve the spam problem (which is what we're discussing here and the focus of my comment), and introduces its own problems.
I don't have a spam problem. Get an ISP or mail provider with some decent filters. Mine's been stopping spam since the '00 or something. Sometimes the spammers caught up, but only very temporary. I don't have a spam problem. I use the + to figure out how people (ie. marketeers/bots) got my e-mail address.
Also, a password manager does not introduce any meaningful problems.
Your modus operandus means you cannot share your e-mail address whereas my spam filter is so good that the amount of false positives and false negatives is negligible.
> (They also have the side benefit of a little added security when someone hacks Site A's account database and tries to use the email addresses to log in to Site
Using a password manager plus randomly generated, complex passwords mitigates that problem entirely insofar that your accounts can be used on different websites.
Both our solutions do not mitigate the doxing issue. A way to deal with that is removing your personal details whenever they're unnecessary (e.g. changing/removing them after you ordered something). Artifacts might still remain though, and faking them is probably illegal. It can lead to issues as well. My mother always gives a fake DOB akin to her own when she doesn't trust it, or gives a slight variant of her name. Then she knows something is wrong. Pretty clever, esp before this century.