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by sadasd21asda
3373 days ago
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I disagree. I run a SaaS product and disposable emails are a bane to my existence. I get thousands of signups a day from people all around the world using disposable email addresses trying to milk the free tier of the product. You have no idea the lengths people will go to. If all you wanted to do was test a product out, create a real email address even if it's full of bogus details. If you won't try my product without a real address then you're a customer I don't want and don't need. |
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For a product with a "free tier" that doesn't work where a user needs to sign up several times, the product itself is flawed.
However, disposable emails again are not the problem, as there are tons of ways to get valid, working emails to bypass any unique email requirements. Blocking disposable emails aren't going to help you with that. The only thing you're removing it a user's access to better privacy. Again, if you require knowing who your users are then you are not a free service.
If you don't care about having users unless you know their real email addresses then you should consider validating their identity in other means, besides an email address. Many services use a text message to validate you also have a phone number that works, which is much harder to anonymize (although I personally have four different numbers for this very reason, based on the trust I give a service I decide which number I want to provide them - since to me, my privacy is worth something, I don't share it for free).