I use SimpleLogin, since it comes with my Proton subscription and integrates with BitWarden.
33 0 ReplyThat's also my setup. I like that Bitwarden lets you generate aliases on the fly provided you entered your API key. Otherwise the Simple Login app is also very convenient.
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Anonaddy with bitwarden integration. I went with them over Simplelogin for the price.
17 0 ReplyBitwarden integration. Tell me more
6 0 ReplyWorks the same way as the others mentioned here.
https://bitwarden.com/blog/add-privacy-and-security-using-email-aliases-with-bitwarden/
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I just use DuckDuckGo's one. with a bit of tinkering you can make it integrate with Bitwarden.
12 0 ReplyThanks for mentioning this. I didn't know Bitwarden worked with DDG's email service.
The Bitwarden official documentation covers this for anyone looking: https://bitwarden.com/help/generator/
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Simplelogin with proton pass. With proton pass it couldn't be easier (aside from a keyboard integration)
6 0 ReplyAnonaddy, I've been using it for a few years.
5 0 ReplyI use Firefox Relay, I use the paid version but the free version is good too
5 0 ReplyI use this too - why was this downvoted? Is there something we're missing with Relay?
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Spam Gourmet. The main feature is that for each alias you set the maximum number of emails to be forwarded before dumping them to /dev/null.
3 0 ReplySame here. Really usefull
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Buy a domain with privacy whois. Host email somewhere (zoho, mailbox.org or the likes). Use the domain as a catch-all address. Profit.
2 0 ReplyI use a generic custom domain. Like @tangomail.com. I’ve enabled catch-all on that domain and create aliases on the fly.
Prior to that I’ve used Simple Login, AnonAddy and DuckDuckGo E-mail Protection. I’ve used DDG the longest, and the only thing I miss was a dashboard.
2 0 Reply