Welp I guess this is the perfect example of companies not deleting your credentials and account info when asking for it… I deleted my Notion account several years ago. And completely randomly today got an email from them about data retention, assuming this is one of those “important” emails they have to send out. Sadly, years ago I wasnt using email-aliases like I am today, so still stuck with them having my email. Fuck I hate this so much. Thought I’d just share this lesson, use alises my friends!

  • umbrella
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    7 months ago

    tell me more about how you use aliases.

    you just using a new one for every service?

    • lazynooblet@lazysoci.al
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      7 months ago

      Back when I used self hosted mail, I wrote an extension that requested a new alias based on the domain of the website.

      Like website.net_d5g4j8@mydomain.com

      If the site got compromised I would update the random characters.

      I still have 800+ aliases left over from this. But after moving to hosted mail I never updated the extension.

      • 9point6@lemmy.world
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        7 months ago

        Surprisingly little known fact, email addresses actually have the concept of aliases built in (and it’s relatively well supported despite being a bit niche):

        your.email+some.alias@gmail.com

        Will end up in the inbox of

        your.email@gmail.com

        But will retain the alias in the To field

        The downside is that if a sender is particularly shitty it could detect this and remove the alias again.

    • Detective'@slrpnk.netOP
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      7 months ago

      Yes indeed, password managers have the option to do this, at least Protonpass and Bitwarden. While Bitwarden you need to connect a third party email service. But it’s relatively easy, especially with Protonpass as it will automatically suggest to do this when you create an account somewhere.

    • toynbee@lemmy.world
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      7 months ago

      With self hosted email and at least Proton Mail (and probably other paid solutions), you can set up a “catch all” address. With that, any non existing email gets redirected to one; for me, I have spam@domain.com so, while myname@domain.com goes to my inbox, thisaddressisinvalid@domain.com and, I don’t know, walmart@domain.com both go to spam@domain.com. I don’t need an individual entry for every alias and I can specifically block any address that’s particularly spammy or compromised.

      I hear that you can have a similar setup with something called SimpleLogin, but I’ve never tried that.