Trying to de-google and looking for an alternative to Gmail.
Don’t mind if it’s a paid service if it’s robust.
Matt ( @Matt@lemdro.id ) English106•2 years agoProton Mail and Tutanota are great free options.
Dave ( @Dave@lemmy.nz ) 10•2 years agoLast I checked, the encryption in Proton Mail means you have to use their app, no third party apps allowed. Is that still true?
Matt ( @Matt@lemdro.id ) English11•2 years agoYes, that’s still true. If you want to be able to use a third-party mail app, I would look at Fastmail or Mailbox.org. They don’t have free plans though.
JoyfulCodingGuy ( @JoyfulCodingGuy@lemmy.ml ) 7•2 years agoPhone app? Yes you have to use their own app. On a computer besides the browser version you can use Thunderbird and other applications if you download ProtonBridge.
Newwit ( @Newwit@lemmy.blahaj.zone ) English3•2 years agoTo clarify, this is a paid feature and not included with the free tier
gamer ( @gamer@lemm.ee ) English5•2 years agoYup, and it’s kind if a pain since their mobile apps aren’t great. I’ve been using them for many years, and lately have been considering jumping ship.
Email encryption isn’t something I actually care about. If I wanted to send someone a super private message, I probably wouldn’t use email anyways since it’s just clunky, and it’s unlikely the other person is using proton mail too (which means the message wouldn’t be encrypted anyways). All I really want is to not have my email provider be scanning my messages to profit from my data.
But the effort to switch to something else is making me stay…
ominouslemon ( @ominouslemon@lemm.ee ) 9•2 years agoYou don’t use encrypted emails only to communicate privately. If they are not encrypted, your e-mail provider will probably scan them, whether it is for profit or under request from the NSA. That’s what Snowden uncovered.
gamer ( @gamer@lemm.ee ) 2•2 years agoThat’s a good point, but also the more I think about it the more I realize it’s futile. Google is 100% going to scan the messages I send to gmail users, and match it to me somehow.
Newwit ( @Newwit@lemmy.blahaj.zone ) English1•2 years agoWith Tutanota the Gmail user only gets a link (optionally password protected). Google can’t scan the actual content of the mail.
hikaru755 ( @hikaru755@feddit.de ) 2•2 years agoSame with Proton if you enable encryption for emails to non-proton addresses
Cryptic Fawn ( @CrypticFawn@lemmy.dbzer0.com ) English1•2 years agoI’ve had zero issues with the mobile app for mail.
FancyFeaster ( @FancyFeaster@lemmy.fail ) English3•2 years agoI’ll be honest, when it comes to online purchases you may find that a protonmail email will require extra processing/fraud checking due to the amount of fraudsters that use it. Combine that with a vpn and it will just be a pain here and there with online purchases like additional ID verification/delayed orders etc…
tycho ( @tycho@lemmy.sdf.org ) 5•2 years agoBeen using protonmail for my main email for three years, never had one issue. But I’m in Europe, maybe in the US it’s different?
FancyFeaster ( @FancyFeaster@lemmy.fail ) English1•2 years agoI’m more talking global purchases. Just the email will probs be ok but if you purchase using that email and a vpn it raises flags.
shadow ( @shadow@lemmy.sdf.org ) 1•2 years agoThis has happened exactly once to me, and it was the VPN, and not the email address.
Paid plan folks can also make use of simplelogin.io
hoodlem ( @hoodlem@hoodlem.me ) English41•2 years agoI use Proton Mail. I recommend that whatever service you decide on, get your own domain name so you can keep your email address if you move to a different provider.
MammyWhammy ( @MammyWhammy@lemmy.ml ) 5•2 years agoDo you have any recommendations on how to buy a domain?
Gyoza Power ( @GyozaPower@discuss.tchncs.de ) 7•2 years agoNot OP, but I used Namecheap. Porkbun is also recommended I think. Setting it up is not dead-brain simple, but Proton does a very good job on explaining it step by step I believe.
フ卂ㄖ卄乇卂卄 ( @jao@lemy.lol ) English5•2 years agoI use Porkbun for my domain. you can get a .xyz domain for only $2 for 1 year, though after 1 year its like $8 per year.
Corr ( @Corr@lemm.ee ) 2•2 years agoI’m using namesilo and it was pretty straight forward to set up. I just got it a couple days ago and no issues so far!
QuazarOmega ( @QuazarOmega@lemy.lol ) 2•2 years agoThat would make it easier to target you though, or do you use aliases on top of that?
hoodlem ( @hoodlem@hoodlem.me ) English3•2 years agoI’m not sure I know what you mean by “target you”. Can you go into more detail about that?
QuazarOmega ( @QuazarOmega@lemy.lol ) 3•2 years agoBy having a common email address that you give out to each service you sign up on you make it easier for them to aggregate the data and build a more detailed profile on you, in order to avoid it you would use email aliases (dummy address that serve the purpose of only forwarding emails they receive from and to one of your real address). If you use a custom domain name you can potentially create an infinite amount of them, but you expose yourself to being tracked anyway because they would all have the domain name in common e.g.
a@mydomain.me
,b@mydomain.me
, etc. and they would notice that it all comes from one user for service, so it’s easy to guess it is actually just one real person.
To avoid that happening, you would have to use a public aliasing service so you can blend in with the other users lemmyvore ( @lemmyvore@feddit.nl ) English1•2 years agoAny decent email hosting service should allow you some form of aliasing (whether it’s plus addressing or actual aliases). Ideally there should be no “default” address associated @your.domain, it should be all aliases. Preferably with wildcards so you can make them up on the fly when subscribing to a random website, without having to go into the admin settings. And naturally they should also offer wildcard sending (being able to send from anything@your.domain – this is supported by most decent email clients).
Bottom line, as long as it’s your own domain and you don’t abuse things like receiving/sending limits, attachment size, total storage size etc. you should be able to do whatever you want with your addresses and mailboxes.
YⓄ乙 ( @yoz@aussie.zone ) 41•2 years agoTry proton mail. I love it
Yeah I’ll go Proton. Was going to go with Fastmail but then read that they’re an Australian company, a Five Eyes country.
TheLemming ( @u202307011927@feddit.de ) 4•2 years agoIt’s quite expensive whereas you get the same product even better for 12€ a year with posteo.de
lemmyvore ( @lemmyvore@feddit.nl ) English2•2 years agoPosteo doesn’t allow you to use your own domain, do they? I know OP didn’t ask for that but it’s a really, really good idea to put your email addresses on a domain that you own.
Still, it would be a definite step up from Google.
- ∟⊔⊤∦∣≶ ( @luthis@lemmy.nz ) 39•2 years ago
I’m using ProtonMail and paying for it.
It’s decent. The best AFAIK in terms of privacy. Supports labels etc.
The migration process takes so long, I’m split between both still and slowly moving over.
lagomorphlecture ( @lagomorphlecture@lemm.ee ) 29•2 years agoIdk I’m still using my Hotmail that I got in 1995 so…
AlternateRoute ( @AlternateRoute@lemmy.ca ) English5•2 years agoMy hotmail account is my oldest still in use online account.
CraigeryTheKid ( @CraigeryTheKid@beehaw.org ) 4•2 years agoMe too! Pretty close to moving to proton though. Might wait for Black Friday rates.
kostel_thecreed ( @kostel_thecreed@lemmy.ca ) 2•2 years agoWhat made you adamant on getting proton? Curious, cause I could mention some cheaper, but very competent email services.
CraigeryTheKid ( @CraigeryTheKid@beehaw.org ) 2•2 years agooh I wouldn’t say I’m “adamant” - but to answer your question I was looking to unGoogle my Google Drive and GMail, and Proton popped up pretty quick for having both. I’m currently paying for Private Internet Access VPN, but once that expires I could also get a 3rd function out of Proton with their VPN. I also want my new mail service to allow custom domains, which Proton also does.
kostel_thecreed ( @kostel_thecreed@lemmy.ca ) 1•2 years agoYeah drive is a pretty good feature. Do be warned though, proton’s overall Linux support is bad, including the VPN and drive. $8 for unlimited (which comes with everything you mentioned) a month is a little steep, but if you’ll use the VPN and the email it’s definitely worth it. Enjoy man.
CraigeryTheKid ( @CraigeryTheKid@beehaw.org ) 1•2 years agoThanks! Fortunately (unfortunately?) I’m all Windows atm. Other than my pihole and photoframe.
kostel_thecreed ( @kostel_thecreed@lemmy.ca ) 2•2 years agoI also use Windows. I get the attraction of Linux, I use it for my selfhosting, but I absolutely hate it for day-to-day operations or work. So, don’t feel too bad about it, people love shoving shit down others throats.
Lewistrick ( @Lewistrick@feddit.nl ) 26•2 years agoI’m using Proton Mail and I like it a lot!
mertn ( @mertn@lemmy.sdf.org ) English24•2 years agoI also degoogled to proton. Now one bill for VPN, drive and my own domain email address.
フ卂ㄖ卄乇卂卄 ( @jao@lemy.lol ) English22•2 years agoProton Mail. https://pm.me/
kostel_thecreed ( @kostel_thecreed@lemmy.ca ) 21•2 years ago- Tutanota
- Protonmail
- Mailbox.org
- Posteo.de
- Runbox
- Fastmail
I would recommend either Mailbox or Posteo simply because they cost 1€/m. For email I find that anything more than like $2 is a waste of money, but that is my opinion.
Both Tutanota and Protonmail offer freemium versions of their services.
The Cuuuuube ( @Cube6392@beehaw.org ) 3•2 years agoThe most important part of Posteo and Mailbox.org is its easy to send and receive emails with non technical users
Can-Utility ( @Can_Utility@beehaw.org ) English2•2 years agoDo either of them support forwarding messages from another domain? I’ve worked places that blocked my personal email, so I’ve mostly used Gmail to forward my personal domain.
kostel_thecreed ( @kostel_thecreed@lemmy.ca ) 1•2 years agoWhich ones? I mentioned more than 2 lol
lastweakness ( @lastweakness@lemm.ee ) 18•2 years agoSkiff or Protonmail.
Skiff gives you 10 GBs of storage and also comes with a drive and a Notion-like Pages app. They even let you add custom domain for free. The only disadvantages are the non-native Android or iOS apps that just feel off and the limits on folders and filters.
ProtonMail only gives 1GB of storage and stuff like custom domains, aliases, etc are all paid features. The Android app is decent but missing some basic features that you only notice when you actually use it (select and delete when searching for example). Definitely the most robust mail service there is though. With Proton Unlimited, you also get stuff like per-site aliases using SimpleLogin, Proton VPN, Proton Drive, Proton Calendar and Proton Pass. But if I’m being honest, only the Mail and VPN are truly complete products.
hikaru755 ( @hikaru755@feddit.de ) 3•2 years agoProton drive also seems pretty compete to me, now that they have a desktop app that’s working really well (at least for windows, don’t know about other OS’s)
SethranKada ( @SethranKada@lemmy.ca ) English1•2 years agoI agree, it’s pretty functional. Only issue I’ve had with it is it’s pretty slow, and if you need to upload a lot of files quickly your out of luck.
My boss had me take a couple hundred pictures with my cell, and I didn’t want to waste my time trying to send via sms, so I uploaded then to my drive and shared them. It took 2 hours just to upload them.
hikaru755 ( @hikaru755@feddit.de ) 2•2 years agoa couple hundred pictures
send via sms
(⊙_◎)
Seriously though, that’s interesting. When I moved all my stuff over from Sync to Proton Drive, the upload took about as long as expected, with my uplink being used quite well, at least when larger files were being uploaded.
SethranKada ( @SethranKada@lemmy.ca ) English1•2 years agoYah, even as long as it took, there was no way I was texting him those photos.
I don’t think it was limited by connection speed. I usually get about 1mb down and half that upload, and with each photo about 2mb that should have finished in less than five minutes.
lastweakness ( @lastweakness@lemm.ee ) 1•2 years agoNo sync functionality on Android and no webdav or such, so no support for apps like FolderSync. Also, no client for Linux and macOS.
asap ( @asap@feddit.de ) English2•2 years agoWith Proton Unlimited, you also get stuff like per-site aliases using SimpleLogin, Proton VPN, Proton Drive, Proton Calendar and Proton Pass. But if I’m being honest, only the Mail and VPN are truly complete products.
SimpleLogin is fantastic with a custom domain. Game changer for signing up to websites, especially if you use Bitwarden because they integrate seamlessly. I have paid Proton so the premium version is included for free. Not sure how the free version compares.
lastweakness ( @lastweakness@lemm.ee ) 1•2 years agoSimpleLogin is integrated directly into Proton Pass and Proton Pass has the ability to save them as “Aliases”. So that’s been really neat. I’ve been finding myself using Proton Pass over Bitwarden lately due to how the Proton Pass app syncs the vault better on Android and how the Aliases feature works better with the in-page autofill that Proton Pass has.
asap ( @asap@feddit.de ) English1•2 years agoI’ve not noticed any issues with Bitwarden on Android in the last 2 years of using it - what was happening for you?
Currently BW seems like a bulletproof solution, but it’s good to have options.
lastweakness ( @lastweakness@lemm.ee ) 1•2 years agoBW does feel like a more bulletproof solution tbh. The Android app’s autofill is what I’m bothered by.
This for example, https://community.bitwarden.com/t/add-a-button-to-refresh-vault-in-ios-password-auto-fill-view/32989/9
And also the lack of a UI-based autofill (edit: in browser) means that it’s not possible to easily pick one among multiple logins for the same site.
asap ( @asap@feddit.de ) English1•2 years agoOn my Samsung there is an accessibility button at the far right of the navigation bar. You can configure this to wake up Bitwarden and make it available to autofill (long press). Once I set that up I haven’t had any issues with autofill.
You can pull down in the Android app to refresh, so that solves the problem in your link.
lastweakness ( @lastweakness@lemm.ee ) 1•2 years agoThe pull down action does not work in the “Items for” autofill menu
jtsk2009 ( @jtsk2009@lemmy.ca ) 18•2 years agoProton is my fav non Google email.
Blaze ( @Blaze@discuss.tchncs.de ) 17•2 years ago skadden ( @skadden@ctrlaltelite.xyz ) English17•2 years agoI moved to Fastmail last year and it’s been entirely unremarkable which is exactly what I want. Mail in and out works, it’s reliable, I have my custom domains.
It really depends on the level of privacy you’re going for and what features you want. For me I needed custom domain support with catchalls. The only other requirement I had was to not be Google. I debated between Fastmail and Proton for a while (Fastmail for features/price, Proton for the “better” privacy.) Ultimately I ended up on Fastmail because I would have had to pay for a higher than necessary account at Proton for what I wanted.
Tilted ( @Tilted@programming.dev ) English6•2 years agoI have been using Fastmail for a few years. No complaints. No issues. Entirely unremarkable.
Sean ( @sgriff@lemmy.ml ) English5•2 years agoAlso since most other people aren’t using encrypted email, you kinda don’t really benefit from the Proton encryption afaik. I personally don’t understand the point.
skadden ( @skadden@ctrlaltelite.xyz ) 2•2 years agoYep. It was a fun ooh look what I can do that I have exactly zero people to communicate with using those features.
In the same vein, not using Google is similarly silly. Most of my personal contacts use Gmail or o365 so they still get a copy of my email anyway. But at least this way my money isn’t going to them and nobody’s scanning my inbox to advertise to me (☞゚ヮ゚)☞
Lemmylaugh ( @Lemmylaugh@lemmy.ml ) English1•2 years agoWould using proton keep the ads away?
Sean ( @sgriff@lemmy.ml ) English2•2 years agoI assume some since i assume gmail scans my inbox to serve me ads. But you’d get other ads from browsing history etc still. But Fastmail does the same thing i believe
Newwit ( @Newwit@lemmy.blahaj.zone ) English1•2 years agoIve not used proton, but Tutanota sends a link to the receiver if they don’t use Tutanota themselves. They have to click the link and enter a predetermined password to read the content
Earl Turlet ( @EarlTurlet@lemmy.zip ) English5•2 years agoI’ve been on Fastmail for 10 years. It’s a great service.
After checking out most of these services I think I’ll go with Fastmail, has what I need, plenty of storage, can use third party apps without any hassle.
NaN ( @nan@lemmy.blahaj.zone ) English1•2 years agoI used fastmail with a custom domain but random stuff from specific senders would disappear into the ether and never go through to my mailbox. Everything else worked fine though, but it was enough to switch me back to gmail for a while at least. LDAP is a requirement for me and most of the other popular providers now don’t have it.
skadden ( @skadden@ctrlaltelite.xyz ) 2•2 years agoYeah I suppose I could be missing email and not know (because it never got delivered) but I get everything I expect to receive and I haven’t had anyone reach out asking why I haven’t responded to an email I never received. It’s good enough for me for now though.
LDAP support isn’t something that’s ever crossed my mind for mail, definitely a legit reason to stick with the Googs.
unagi ( @unagi@feddit.nl ) 17•2 years agoI’ve been on Fastmail for several years and like it a lot! It lets you use you own domain name as well. Their app is not particularly great, but you can hook things up with the default iOS/Android/whatever mail app just fine.
dax ( @dax@feddit.de ) 7•2 years agoI agree, I’m a happy customer for several years as well. It’s not the cheapest service, but it’s no-nonsense and reliable.
I pointed my own domain to Fastmail and can use wildcard email addresses (like lemmy@mydomain.com) that all end in my inbox. Also my contacts are synced on the phone with Fastmail using CardDAV support, using the DAVX5 app on Android. It’s really nice to have this much flexibility.
sardonic ( @sardonic@lemmy.sdf.org ) 4•2 years agoFastmail is awesome
Myro ( @Myro@lemm.ee ) 16•2 years agoPaid Fastmail User here since around half a year. Did extensive research on what provider to use and trialed fastmail for four weeks before buying. I went for a 3 year period. Fastmail has a fantastic set of features.
There are providers that are focused more on privacy (e.g. PGP. encryption, not being based in Australia) but that was not my top priority.
I have created a lengthy guide as part of my transition: I published the Markdown file to Fastmail at this link (it is a text file). As it was initially written just for myself, the format might not be very readable :)
jkozaka ( @jkozaka@lemm.ee ) 5•2 years agoCan you send me that to me too please? Do I have to give you my email?
hruzgar ( @hruzgar@feddit.de ) 4•2 years agome too please
druphis ( @druphis@lemmy.zip ) English5•2 years agoAt this point, I think it is safe to post the link.
Myro ( @Myro@lemm.ee ) English2•2 years agoI published the Markdown file to Fastmail at this link (it is a text file). As it was initially written just for myself, the format might not be very readable :)
Myro ( @Myro@lemm.ee ) English1•2 years agoI published the Markdown file to Fastmail at this link (it is a text file). As it was initially written just for myself, the format might not be very readable :)
Ryan ( @rts@lemm.ee ) English1•2 years agoFastmail
What’s the spam control like with Fastmail? I tend to get quite a bit and Gmail’s been the only half-decent one so far about stopping it from ever reaching the inbox but I’m considering moving from Google Workspace.
sunbeam60 ( @sunbeam60@lemmy.one ) 5•2 years agoFastMail user for 7+ years. Their spam filtering is good. I hardly get any and my email address is 20+ years old and have been used in public plenty.
Ryan ( @rts@lemm.ee ) English2•2 years ago@Myro@lemm.ee @sunbeam60@lemmy.one Thanks for the information both of you. I realised my Google Workspace subscription lapses in a week so I’ve signed up for a trial of Fastmail and really liking it so far. 😀
sunbeam60 ( @sunbeam60@lemmy.one ) 1•2 years ago🤜🤛
Myro ( @Myro@lemm.ee ) 1•2 years agoAs my app posted the reply as a top comment, here it is again:
One important thing to take note of is: “Once your personal database has seen more than 200 spam and 200 non-spam emails, we automatically start using it to filter your incoming mail.” This means, before you have received 200 spam emails (or marked them as such), the filter is going to perform significantly worse.
Personally, initially it was pretty bad compared to Gmail. However, it significantly improved over time. One thing that helps are masked emails (fantastic) - an email you can create, or is even created automatically for you, and then enter at dubious websites. If you get spam, you can simply block the whole email or fine tune it.