I built a free anonymous email service that requires zero personal data.
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I built a free anonymous email service that requires zero personal data.
No phone number
No password
No name
No existing email
No tracking
No logsJust pick a username → get a 32-character access code → done in 10 seconds.
Full features: folders, search, 25MB attachments, spam filter, 13 languages.
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I built a free anonymous email service that requires zero personal data.
No phone number
No password
No name
No existing email
No tracking
No logsJust pick a username → get a 32-character access code → done in 10 seconds.
Full features: folders, search, 25MB attachments, spam filter, 13 languages.
@qryptymail not open source
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I built a free anonymous email service that requires zero personal data.
No phone number
No password
No name
No existing email
No tracking
No logsJust pick a username → get a 32-character access code → done in 10 seconds.
Full features: folders, search, 25MB attachments, spam filter, 13 languages.
@qryptymail qryptymail is kind of a black box; can you give details to help us trust your privacy promises?
Free typically means user data is a profit mechanism. I dont see info on geo/national aspects of your service like who and where you are, or even a ‘we had XYZ trusted-org audit us’ . And who’s paying for storage? You mention searchable mailboxes, 25 meg attachments, but no limits… starts to feel like someone could abuse this — then when the cost becomes insurmountable, we all lose info if you discontinue.
One can both trust and want shared/gift economies and fear for instance that seem ripe for abuse.
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R relay@relay.infosec.exchange shared this topic