Hi All,
I would like to choose a new email provider, where security and privacy of the email is one of my main concerns (nothing to hide, but want to keep my data private, differently than what happens with the major providers). I have read maaany posts and websites guides but I am still confused. I am happy to pay a euro or so /month, so I had reduced my choice to Mailbox, Posteo, Mailfence. The problem is that each of them has some flows that don’t let me go ahead with them!
Mailbox: uses PGP, so not straightforward to send encrypted emails (unlike with tutanota) and to have encryption at rest. No mobile app. Alias reuse after 90 days Posteo: no spam folder. ALias reuse after 24 months Mailfence : has no encryption at rest , no mobile app. Not sure about alias reuse

Have you got any comments on the above providers and /or other suggestions (except for Tutanota and Protonmail)? thank you, appreciated!

  • nullptr@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    ProtonMail is becoming really, really expensive for what they are (basic email with on-disk encryption) so I’m planning to move out when my current subscription period ends. For alternatives I’m looking at https://purelymail.com (although the longevity and reliability of that one is a bit questionable) and Tutanota.

    In my ideal world I could actually self-host my email on my on-prem physical server, but the chances of getting whitelisted by Gmail and Office are nonexistent. Basically all emails sent from self-hosted instances to Gmail/Office email addresses are going to go straight to spam (sometimes even deleted directly), even if they are replies to emails sent from those accounts.

    • Andreas@feddit.dk
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      1 year ago

      I have my emails set up with Purelymail, they’re great if you don’t need the extra office suite tools and have a lot of custom domain addresses, but I’m also skeptical about the “single point of failure” setup as everything is run by one person and the entire service can go down with him. As far as I’m aware, there isn’t any other mail service that doesn’t charge extra for additional domains.

      • nullptr@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        The single point of failure setup with Purelymail does indeed give me the occasional worry. But fortunately there are a lot of standard tools and processes for migrating email content from one server to another via IMAP and email archives. You can e.g. have a Thunderbird client running at all times, connected to your Purelymail server via IMAP, that will download an offline copy of everything you have in your Purelymail account(s). If Purelymail goes down tomorrow, you can find another provider that supports IMAP, update your DNS MX records, upload your Thunderbird archive to the new provider, and start using your new email provider as never even happened.

        Email migrations from hosting provider to another have been among the easiest migrations I’ve ever had to work with. You only have to convince both parties to open up an IMAP server interface for you. ProtonMail can do this with Proton Bridge, but they also have a tool for importing raw .mbox files from Thunderbird.

        • 5ubieee@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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          1 year ago

          After reading up on this some more it seems like he has plans in place to have his brother maintain the service if he can’t anymore, and even if he didn’t, the service should run until his aws subscription ends. Seems like not too big of an issue even for those who don’t use a client.

          • nullptr@lemmy.world
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            1 year ago

            Yes, this is one of the wonderful benefits of federation. Thanks to IMAP, you can constantly keep an offline copy of all your emails. If Purelymail stops working for whatever reason, you can just sign up somewhere else, point your domain MX records to the new server and upload your emails there via IMAP or their own import tool. Migrating takes less than an hour, and even that is only because it takes a while for the DNS MX records to propagate.