Hi Guys,<p>I'm Spencer and recently built AutoUnsubscribe to keep on top of my email subscriptions.<p>The basic idea is: Automatically unsubscribe from unwanted emails that you never open, so you can focus on the emails that matter, saving yourself time and effort.<p>I find overtime I accumulate hundreds of email subscriptions accidentally, especially when I ran an ecommerce business where our emails seemed to end up on all our suppliers, and their suppliers mailing lists. Some people stay on top of unsubscribing easily, however it's something I've always struggled with, especially having ADHD. I wanted a way to stop my inboxes getting out of control without me having to do anything so I built this app.<p>An added bonus is it helps you unsubscribe from subscriptions you were on the fence about unsubscribing too, as it points out you have not even opened them. It also warns you before unsubscribing and gives you a chance to whitelist a subscription, to make sure you keep the ones you care about.<p>I realised a lot of people would get the most value out of AutoUnsubscribe very quickly, so I wanted to provide an option for them, as opposed to just subscribing for a month and then cancelling. As a result the base pricing is $5 for seven days, which will let you basically clean out your inbox. I built out the app using Ruby on Rails, to avoid getting lost in the complexity of Javascript frameworks, as an individual developer/designer I think it was the right choice.<p>The app is privacy focused, I will never share or sell your data. It's also why it is a paid app. I know free unsubscribe apps in the past have monetized by selling user data.<p>You can see the site here: <a href="http://autounsubscribe.me/" rel="nofollow">http://autounsubscribe.me/</a>
I believe Gmail already has this feature: <a href="https://www.mailjet.com/blog/deliverability/understanding-gmail-unsubscribe/" rel="nofollow">https://www.mailjet.com/blog/deliverability/understanding-gm...</a><p>I have used the feature in Gmail, and do like it.
The vast majority of e-mail that I get which claims to have an unsubscribe process is actually spam. If you try to unsubscribe from it, all you've done is proven that your e-mail address is live and monitored, and so you now get your address resold to 100x more spammers.<p>So, I wouldn't recommend doing that sort of process unless you can be 100% certain that the message isn't actually spam, and you can properly unsubscribe from it.
I’ve started using Feedbin to subscribe to pretty much everything: RSS, Twitter, Mastodon, HN, YouTube, Reddit and, most relevantly in terms of this post, newsletters. It gives you a custom email address for sign up forms and then if you don’t want to receive the newsletter anymore you simply flick a toggle next to the newsletter or just remove it from your feed list, job done. Absolutely awesome. Using ReadKit as my reader across Mac, iPad and iOS. Getting way more quality content, wasting way less time surfing, no ads, no pop ups and no cookie notifications. Makes the internet an actual blissful experience rather than the hellscape it has now become. Highly recommend.
Looks cool! I remember when I started easyunsubscriber.com. Unsubscribe.com was a competitor and later unroll.me also came around. Both eventually were acquired, I stopped running easyunsubscriber when I couldn't monetize. I think all of these companies had trouble monetizing and had different plans, but eventually weren't able to and got acquired and put into a larger toolset or shut down.<p>Let me know if you want to chat. rcavezza [at] gmail.
It’s a good idea but I feel you’d have to gather users and notoriety with a more trusting general population before asking HN to open up their inbox to a brand new service.