Disposable E-mail Address Services

Posted: Thursday, October 6, 2005 at 2:39 pm (UTC+1)
Filed under: Web
Post to: Blinklist | del.icio.us | furl | simpy | spurl | yahoo

One of the best tricks to stop spam e-mail from reaching your inbox is by creating a disposable e-mail address. I’ve used a Hotmail account for spam for a long time, but recently, many services have popped up which serve exclusively to route spam to. Some of these services provide RSS feeds of e-mail, others let you forward e-mail to your real account. Some require registration, some don’t. See what works best for you.

  • DodgeIt- no registration required, provides RSS feeds, receive-only.
  • E4ward- requires registration, provides mail forwarding, allows multiple aliases of an account.
  • KasMail- requires registration, allows up to 25 aliases, can set aliases to expire after a certain amount of time.
  • Jetable- provides mail forwarding, account autoexpires after certain amount of time.
  • Mailinator- no registration required, provides handy spam map, receive-only, e-mail expires automatically after a few hours.
  • PookMail- no registration required, very simple to use.
  • SneakeMail- requires registration, provides mail forwarding.
  • SpamGourmet- requires registration, provides mail forwarding, can create custom aliases which automatically expire after a certain number of e-mails received.
  • Spam.la- no registration required, no frills. You can see all spam being sent to all Spam.la accounts, or just your own.

Via [tipmonkies]

«« Previous: List of Free Multiplayer Online Games | Next: Installing the Windows Vista sidebar on XP »»

Comments »

The URI to TrackBack this entry is: http://ehoffmann.blogsome.com/2005/10/06/21/trackback/

No comments yet.

RSS feed for comments on this post.

Leave a comment

Line and paragraph breaks automatic, e-mail address never displayed, HTML allowed: <a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <code> <em> <i> <strike> <strong>


More Space | Less Space |


©Ernest Hoffmann 2005. Some Rights reserved. Hosted with Blogsome