I can imagine that spammers nowadays can write a simple script that drops everything from the + to the @, so while that may work for some spammers, others will just use your normal email address. I’ve resorted to creating a catchall for my personal domain. Also not ideal, but it’ll hopefully take them a while to figure that one out for everyone using their own domain.
A better tip is to buy a domain with an email forwarder configured. I have an infinite number of emails and I can see who’s selling my data by checking what the email user is set to, since I usually sign up with an address related to the service I’m using.
Some apps let you create an email account first then link socials/OAuth providers on top, so there’s that. But other times it’s indeed a good solution. Unless the site uses validation that doesn’t allow for subaddress extension.
One tip for ousting certain leaks is with gmail you can setup an email address like [email protected] you just have to forgo the login with google bit
I can imagine that spammers nowadays can write a simple script that drops everything from the + to the @, so while that may work for some spammers, others will just use your normal email address. I’ve resorted to creating a catchall for my personal domain. Also not ideal, but it’ll hopefully take them a while to figure that one out for everyone using their own domain.
A better tip is to buy a domain with an email forwarder configured. I have an infinite number of emails and I can see who’s selling my data by checking what the email user is set to, since I usually sign up with an address related to the service I’m using.
Some apps let you create an email account first then link socials/OAuth providers on top, so there’s that. But other times it’s indeed a good solution. Unless the site uses validation that doesn’t allow for subaddress extension.