Comment by rendleflag

Comment by rendleflag 20 hours ago

49 replies

I’ve been a Fastmail user for years, having left Gmail. It works great and have nothing be but praise for them. I use my own domain with them so if I decide to leave it’s not an issue worrying about updating people with my new email.

onlyhumans 20 hours ago

Fastmail is kind of a weird service. If you stop paying they release your email for someone else to take over. Pretty unacceptable this day and age.

  • litmus-pit-git 15 hours ago

    The trick is in never ever touching the username@paid-main-provider.tld to give out to anyone. It's just for logging in.

    My mailbox.org username is literally three random short Engish dict words concatnated by underscores (e.g jet_sit_gill@mailbox.org) just to ensure I'd never share that email with anyone. I only use my domain's email addresses. This way there's ZERO lock, zero fear of them giving my email to someone else and staying with the domain provider for a day longer than I have to.

    For email addresses on others' domains here

    - icloud.com came with the devices (I honestly have not thought about what happens to these if I have zero Apple device at one point in future :D)

    - tutanota(barely ever used; just to support them I paid until they removed the 12/year plan)

    - protonmail, and sdf.org (ARPA)

    All of these at least let me hold on to the email address even with little resources when I stop paying or have an unpaid a/c. So little risk of email goign to someone else. And I never use these for anything important anyway.

    For temp emails - duck.com, HideMyEmail (stopped using this one for new accounts though).

  • qingcharles 13 hours ago

    This does not appear correct. I lost my original account in 2013 and the handle is extremely unique, and I just tried to reregister it, and it won't allow it. ("Sorry, [redacted]@fastmail.fm has already been taken.")

    Are you sure you didn't confuse domains? My original handle is on fastmail.fm, but it will let me register that on fastmail.com.

  • kelnos 18 hours ago

    I really wish all mail providers made it easy and seamless to bring your own domain (or register and manage one in the background for you, without you having to care for the details). Obviously giving a service-tied email domain to users is a great lock-in strategy. But it's worrying that so many people have a big part of their online identity tied to Google.

    (You can even sign up for a Google Account without GMail, using a third-party domain. And this is distinct from Google Workspace, or whatever they're calling it today. You get a normal, regular, personal Google Account, just without GMail and using your own non-gmail.com address.)

    • qingcharles 13 hours ago

      Fastmail makes it super easy to bring your own domains. As many as you want even on their cheapest plan.

    • litmus-pit-git 15 hours ago

      Yes, I use Google (that's rare; when I 'must' must) with a icloud.com temp hidemyemail address created Google a/c.

  • jeffparsons 19 hours ago

    This would be easily solved for customers who care about it by allowing you to pay a one-off fee to reserve the name for ~100 years.

    Or they could just absorb that.

    Any idea why it works that way? Have they offered an explanation?

    I'm a Fastmail customer but I've never noticed this because I use my own domain.

  • everybodyknows 4 hours ago

    With Fastmail, creating an email alias is free, and quick -- I have dozens myself. There's good reason FM would not want these to be tied up forever.

    Could the above report have lost the distinction between original, paid-for Fastmail address, and user-created free aliases to it?

  • solid_fuel 16 hours ago

    When you move to a new house the old address becomes available for mail eventually.

    • tasn 16 hours ago

      Email is used a single factor (either because of magic links or forgot password flows), so the impact is much larger than getting your snail mail sent to someone else.

      Also, whoever takes your old residence is probably not malicious (they just want the house because they want a house), but whoever takes your email address is much more likely to be malicious (as the acquisition cost is low and it scales).

  • MatmaRex 15 hours ago

    I don't think that's true. Some years ago I did a free trial with them (did not pay anything). More recently I decided to actually sign up (for a paid account) and the email address I used for the free trial years ago was not available. I eventually got that username only after contacting support and giving them the date on which I started that free trial, to prove it was me.

  • FireBeyond 19 hours ago

    I use Fastmail with my own domain. I am not sure of the logic that says paying $60/year for email is fine, but $8/year for a domain is a bridge too far.

    Do that, it's a non-issue, though I do agree with you that it shouldn't be a thing (or at least have like a multiple year embargo on the address).

    • freehorse 9 hours ago

      Using domain for identification carries a similar risk though? If for whatever reason you stop renting the domain somebody else can rent your identification. You are not locked into an email provider but you are locked into a rented domain and the whole domain marketplace rules, by extension. At least with most email providers your email address is not supposed to be resold (likely with fastmail too judging by the responses).

      Am I missing something?

    • ants_everywhere 14 hours ago

      > Do that, it's a non-issue

      I think the issue is why use an email provider that has designed such a glaring security hole into their system? Does it not raise questions about their judgment in other matters that are less visible to the user?

      • josephg 14 hours ago

        First, it’s not been established that they do have that security hole. Someone upthread said the email address they used during a fastmail trial was no longer available when they tried to sign up later because they didn’t want to give out the address again.

        Second, and I don’t know how much weight this carries - but I personally know some of the people on the Fastmail team. They’re some of the most thoughtful, steady engineers I’ve ever met. Every time I’ve criticised something about Fastmail to my friends there, it turns out they’ve had the same discussion internally and immediately tell me about a bunch of arguments I hadn’t thought of which explain their final product choices. I wish much more of my software was made at companies like that. They have excellent judgement. They’re absolutely the right kind of people to host a long lived email service.

        • ants_everywhere 5 hours ago

          You can find several discussions of this practice online, including people commenting that they receive email for previous holders of those ids.

          The commenter above may have never deleted the alias to release it for reuse.

          Reusing email addresses is pretty universally considered terrible practice. So you may want to discuss it with your friends there.

  • coro_1 6 hours ago

    Definitely not acceptable, sounds like not good thinking. Consumer protections might exist in the US for this.

  • akoboldfrying 17 hours ago

    Domain names work the same way -- once you stop paying for it, someone else can buy and use it.

    Do you have the same problem with domain names? If so, how would you propose to fix it?

    • soraminazuki 17 hours ago

      That's incredibly dishonest reasoning. Are you seriously telling me that unless people have a solution for fixing DNS, commercial email should be free to hand out used email addresses? Seriously?

      • opello 16 hours ago

        Isn't it more like fixing whois than fixing DNS? It's the name registration part while "fixing DNS" seems like it carries a lot of additional baggage that doesn't map to the "service username" space.

      • akoboldfrying 13 hours ago

        Sure.

        Now that you've said what you wanted to say about how dishonest the question is, would you like to either answer it or explain why the analogy fails to hold?

  • raincom 19 hours ago

    It is easier to change MX records for your personal domain.

  • [removed] 19 hours ago
    [deleted]
  • vhstapes 16 hours ago

    At one point in the late 90s the U.S. Post Office was going to host email. Sadly, it didn’t happen.

    • litmus-pit-git 15 hours ago

      You don't have reserved/registered post bags (with a identifier at a certain post office) in your country? Or not available to individual users?

  • NomDePlum 19 hours ago

    How's that different from any other provider?

    • winrid 19 hours ago

      At the very least it's weird when you consider their privacy focused marketing and the fact that it costs them like nothing to delete the data but mark that email taken.

    • Sayrus 19 hours ago

      Most prevent your username/email from being reused but restrict access or storage. From what I've seen, the delay often ranges from 30 days to years (but not guaranteed).

    • litmus-pit-git 15 hours ago

      This way - many different providers either lock that username away and throw the key (even you can't get it again; some give you the key instead of throwing away but no space in their home until you pay again) and some just graciously offer a free plan with that address whith little or barely any resources (which is actually great and very generious of them). Which ones? Google around and you shall find.

    • lemoncucumber 18 hours ago

      Any provider with a free tier doesn’t have the issue so that covers a lot of them

  • chias 16 hours ago

    not if you use your own domain they don't.

  • super256 16 hours ago

    So does mailbox do from OP. Just after some time, depending on which package you had. Eg after your light package expired, the address is free for reregistration after 90 days.

    I find it "meh" as well.

palata 20 hours ago

I was really happy with Fastmail as well. Before that I used ProtonMail, which was annoying because it forced me to install their bridge and use their encryption stuff.

After Fastmail I went to Migadu, and it's absolutely great. I have never seen support requests getting answers that quickly :-).

  • tamimio 18 hours ago

    I don’t see masked email feature in Migadu, is there one? Useful for burner services

    • kenmacd 16 hours ago

      I use identities for this:

      https://migadu.com/guides/identities/

      I can send as the address, and emails arrive in my normal mailbox. I also use them for giving self-hosted services their own address/password to email me.

      • litmus-pit-git 15 hours ago

        How's migadu's email ip reputation? Also do you have to create these identities in that admin panel to use or you can use it on the go like duck.com or Apple's hide my email?

        • kenmacd 3 hours ago

          Not sure on the reputation, but I personally haven't had any issues emailing people using gmail or microsoft. They have a good DNS Diagnostics page that checks all your domains DKIM/SPF/DMARC settings.

          I've been using identities created in the admin panel, but they do have subdomain addresses where everything to *@user.domain goes to user@domain, and you can configure a 'Catchall' address (and of course 'plus addresses'). I haven't used either though.

HumanOstrich 17 hours ago

I'm in the process of switching from Gmail to FastMail. They were the only ones who met one of my requirements: Receive all email for all my domains and deliver it to one inbox with labels.

I really like that they offer a Gmail migration, including an initial import and _ongoing Inbox sync_. It only syncs the Inbox though, not spam (which is sometimes legit, especially with Gmail) or mail that gets immediately archived by a rule.

I created an alternate domain so I could try them out and perform the switch after a significant evaluation period. Since they have advanced options for figuring out which address to reply to an email with and how, it works seamlessly with gmail and with the catch-all for domains.

I could go on and on. The only thing I miss from Gmail is custom notification sounds. I don't like my email notifications having the default OS sound. Oh and you can't migrate stars/icons for emails. I wish I could do that and convert them to labels, but not a big deal.

  • nine_k 9 hours ago

    > can't migrate stars/icons for emails.

    (1) Create s label for starred emails, eg "Star-struck". A Unicode star would do if you like it literal.

    (2) In gmail, search for "is:starred", mark all on the page, then "mark all matching emails".

    (3) Drop the "Star-struck" tag on them. Now you can migrate it as a normal tag.

ternaryoperator 20 hours ago

Like you, I am a happy long-term user of Fastmail. In addition to the excellent mail and calendar service, their tech support is top-notch: fast and generally providing the correct answer in their first communication.

  • jesterson 11 hours ago

    How dod you that? I am paying them thousands per year and support is neither good nor fast.

    And my requests are usually well written as we deal with emails a lot and understand how it works (if you pardon my slight bragging)

tamimio 17 hours ago

I am a person who doesn't have any brand loyalty. If there's something else that's better or has the same features at the same cost, I will go for it. That being said, Fastmail has been great. Besides the unlimited domains and masked email features, I never had an issue with my emails ending up in someone else's spam folder. This is crucial to me not to lose a client or a job, or even government communications. Some might argue about security/privacy, but emails are never meant to be that medium for secure communications. Even with PGP you would still leak metadata, so if you are after security, don't use email. Other than that, I will be after reliability and ease of use features.

  • upofadown 17 hours ago

    In particular, encrypted email provides privacy but not anonymity. You need some sort of onion routing system for that. Back in the day people would set up such routing systems for email.

    It turns out that most people don't really need anonymity. That is why most systems these days don't bother the user with all the associated hassle. Briar and Session come to mind as contemporary examples of such things.

doctorpangloss 14 hours ago

That’s the thing, you never left Gmail, since most recipients use it. You have to play by Google’s rules for deliverability across all mail providers. It cannot be “left.”

bsder 17 hours ago

Is there a way to use Fastmail such that you run a receive email server but use Fastmail to send?

I don't mind running an email server for receive. I despise all the hoops you have to jump through for send deliverability.