16
Anonymous Email and Communication: the Ultimate Convenience!
Using proxies, your IP address will be obscured by VPNs from prying eyes, but another anonymity challenge is presented by sending e-mails. Let us say you would like to send an e-mail to somebody, but you do not need your email address to be known by VPNs. Generally, there are just two methods to do this:
An alias is basically a forwarding address. The receiver is only going to see your forwarding address, and not your actual e-mail when you send mail via an alias. This system will keep your actual email address secret, but your regular inbox will not, nevertheless, keep you from being spammed like crazy since all mail is forwarded to it.
These services work by developing a short-term forwarding address that’s deleted after a a predetermined period of time, so they are ideal for retaining your inbox from being flooded with junk and registering for stuff on websites you do not trust.
Additionally, using a VPN and communication via an anonymized email address will keep your identity concealed, but nonetheless, it leaves open the chance of your e-mails being intercepted through a guy-in the middle scheme. You can encrypt your e-mails before you send this to prevent them. Here’s how:
This can add SSL/TLS encryption to all your Web-based communications. It is not bulletproof, but it undoubtedly helps. Just be sure your webmail’s URL has an S (for Protected) after the HTTP. In addition, we advocate utilizing the HTTPS expansion.
There are no comments.