i found "privacy.email" site with free account and more. BUT idk if is really safe. Someone knows?
This not a ad. I really dont know about this and shadow and the owner of this forum didnt mentioned privacy.email in ur blog. BTW i want that if possible do this.
is this email domain a honeypot?
is this email domain a honeypot?
Last edited by www on Thu May 28, 2026 8:28 pm, edited 2 times in total.
Dont believe me. FInd sources!
Re: is this email domain a honeypot?
The free account is worthless, as it can only be used to send to other users of the service. Also no mail client support disqualifies it to me.
Whether it's a honeypot I can't say. Who runs it? They don't say.
Edit: they are also misleading when they say "your email is encrypted in transit". They just mean SSL, not auto-PGP which is what I would interpret the statement as.
Whether it's a honeypot I can't say. Who runs it? They don't say.
Edit: they are also misleading when they say "your email is encrypted in transit". They just mean SSL, not auto-PGP which is what I would interpret the statement as.
Re: is this email domain a honeypot?
Their privacy policy seems fine at first but there's a few suspect things
I don't know, maybe I'm being overly paranoid over some vague wording but I wouldn't trust them.
Pretty good, for the last one that's just how IMAP works. But wait:3. What we collect
3.1 Account data
Required: your username, password (stored as a hash), and mailbox settings needed to operate your account.
Optional: anything you choose to send to support.
3.2 Email content
We store the emails you send and receive so the service can work. This includes message content, headers, attachments, and standard delivery metadata that exists inside the email itself (for example: sender, recipient, subject, dates, and routing headers included by mail servers).
Why would they specifically try to prevent you from using a mail client? Seems very suspect to me. Doesn't seem like they support POP3 either which would prevent them from storing e-mail contents.Allowing remote IMAP/SMTP makes it much easier for accounts to be abused for spam, and it can also create extra ways to link activity back to a user. To keep the service private and protect deliverability for everyone, we only support access through our web interface.
I wonder what counts as "limited" for the third parties?5. Sharing and third parties
We do not sell your data.
We do not share your personal information with third parties for marketing or advertising.
We may rely on infrastructure providers (for example: hosting, bandwidth, DDoS protection, and email delivery components). These providers may process limited data as needed to operate the service.
Again, "limited" with no specifics.7. Data retention
Mailbox data: kept until you delete it or your account is removed.
Billing records: cryptocurrency transaction details are retained indefinitely (see Section 3.3).
Abuse and security: if an account is used for abuse, we may take action including suspension or deletion. Limited records related to security incidents may be retained to protect the service.
Backups: deleted data may remain in backups for a limited time until backups are rotated.
This is somewhat unusual too, albeit they allow you to delete your mailbox data at will (minus the "limited" time when its stored in backups, of course)Account deletion: only upgraded (paid) accounts can delete their account.
I don't know, maybe I'm being overly paranoid over some vague wording but I wouldn't trust them.
Re: is this email domain a honeypot?
Of course, PGP makes all worries about email content storage insignificant but in my experience, most people arent willing to use PGP so you'll be sending some unencrypted mail anyway.
Re: is this email domain a honeypot?
Crypto transaction data is retained indefinitely? Okay, that's definitely a honeypot then.