this post was submitted on 24 Feb 2024
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every provider who supports aliases. like [email protected] where everything after the + is exchangeable. so you can use a 'different' mail for every service you use and just block where spam comes from via the alias.
Not best solution I guess. How about generic sites? Like Git commit mail, my website, Mastodon etc. where I can't add that postfix.
What I do is have some general mailboxes then signed addresses on top of that.
So if you email blog@ or kevincox@ you will get a fairly high level of spam filtering. I also have a few other "memorable" addresses that get reduced spam filtering. If you use the unique signed address that I use for signing up to services, newsletters or whatever where the address is private to a specific service then you basically skip spam filtering. Of course if you abuse that privilege then I will outright block the signed address.
Basically by allowing friends and "trusted" services through the spam filter I can crank up the difficulty for unknown senders.
Why can't you use +-aliases in Git, Mastodon, etc.?
Edit:
git config --local user.email "[email protected]"
shouldn't cause any issues.