The problem with such services is, the moment they rear their heads just above the obscure line to even an iota of popularity, they get blocked, blacklisted and what not.<p>For those who own their own domain for emails, there are multiple ways of doing it - aliases, temporary IDs, filters, etc. Or use such services' backbone/infrastructure that can route the emails but you own the domain.<p><pre><code> `20240523@example.com` is valid for today.</code></pre>
> <i>We do not share, sell, or disclose any personal information or email content to third parties, except as required by law or as necessary to protect our rights, property, or safety.</i><p>This policy claims to protect your privacy but allows them to share your data broadly, including with anyone they see fit to protect their own interests, effectively offering no real privacy guarantee.
I find more convenient to generate the temporary emails right from the command line with something like this: <a href="https://github.com/sdushantha/tmpmail">https://github.com/sdushantha/tmpmail</a>
I recommend <a href="http://grr.la" rel="nofollow">http://grr.la</a> -- no login, just type in the local part of the mailbox and get access to email.
The github icon on the site directs to the author’s own page, and I couldn’t find any repository for the site, which makes me curious why do they even put the github link? Just for a follow?
I guess using a .ml domain is okay for something that explicitly needs to work temporarily, but since the freenom scandal I wouldn't trust such domains.
I had high hopes for 1Password's integration with Fastmail and their masked email feature. Unfortunately I've seldom had it work properly and 1Password never prompts me to create a masked email when creating a new account for something.
It doesn't respect ~/.signature in text-only emails: The tearline and everything under it is just put on one continuous line (together with the body text proper).
Cool, but in terms of UI/UX, the 'Waiting for emails' banner animation is quite choppy and annoying because it isn't seamless and loops endlessly.
I don't have any need for this website at the moment but I might need it in future so I bookmark it. The title of website does not have temporary email so my bookmark does not have that info. Now when I actually need this I can't find the bookmark! Can we please have a little bit context in the title of websites that aren't popular so that it's easy to search the website when needed.
I feel that that's not what email is for. Any communication method needs a return address, otherwise spam and abuse.<p>Email has two very distinct purposes, not 1, not 3.<p>1- federated pseudonymous identity protocol for internet(ip/http).<p>2- medium-length business time insensitive communication.<p>That's it.<p>This sounds like a free experimental product aimed at improving 1, but most service providers will either have to block it or face abuse from users of your domain.<p>What OP doesn't know yet probably is that they will not be the ones under dos/spam,rather they will be used to DoS, spam, simulate traffic, scam, etc...<p>Edit: the ToS outlaws spam, so it is possible they will cooperate with spam blacklist providers like spamhaus ( not sure how). Not sure how businesses will block the domain for acct creation, probably as a whole, Ive seen websites use a whitelist approach like gmail, or outlook.