How digitally independent are you?

  • hperrin@lemmy.ca
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    15 hours ago

    I don’t think Thunderbird is a direct alternative to Gmail. The best alternative is to own your own domain name and use your own email server, but that’s really impractical for most people. At the very least, owning your own domain name that you use for your email is way better than relying on a service that locks you in with their own domain name.

    It’s not super easy to set that up, but it’s easier than most people probably think it is. A service with imap support will let you take all your old email with you if you switch providers.

    My own email service, Port87, doesn’t have custom domain support or imap, but I’m working to add both of those features. Any service you use should have both of those if you want to be independent.

    • BrianTheeBiscuiteer@lemmy.world
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      15 hours ago

      I’ve never hosted anything outside my home. Aren’t there services that are basically 3rd party Docker hosts for which you could run some kind of email container? Preferably not one of the big three, otherwise why leave Gmail?

      • Jeena@piefed.jeena.netOP
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        11 hours ago

        Specifically email is not difficult to host because of the technical burdens but because of the black and whitelisting of the big players. Often your server IP address happens to be put on a black list without your fault and then you can write an email to Microsoft or Google and say ‘pretty please remove my IP address from your blacklist’ and they just don’t answer because they’re swamped with requests like that and they need to check each one manually or something and then suddenly you can’t email to 80% of the email addresses in the world for months.

      • hperrin@lemmy.ca
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        13 hours ago

        Yeah, you can rent a virtual host and set up an email server on it. You gotta make sure port 25 is unblocked, which sometimes requires payment (Azure charges for it). Otherwise, you’d wanna look for a specific email hosting provider. You also would need to make sure the public IP you get isn’t on any spam lists, which can be a huge pain in the butt.

        On my service, I specifically don’t use any spam lists that you have to pay to get off of, but a lot of places do (like Apple iCloud).

        • Voroxpete@sh.itjust.works
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          10 hours ago

          Self hosting email is, unfortunately, a fucking nightmare because you have to jump through a million hoops to get your server off of all the spam filters it will automatically wind up on.

          • hperrin@lemmy.ca
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            9 hours ago

            As someone who runs an email service, you are 1,000,000% right. I think I had literal nightmares about it.