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by C4K3
1477 days ago
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I've been doing this for close to a decade and sometimes salespeople and customer service people will ask to confirm, but that takes 5 seconds and isn't awkward (in my opinion.) It has more benefits than knowing who leaked your email, it lets you easily filter your incoming email by who you gave the email to, and when your email is leaked it lets you shut off that email address. Of course you can also filter your email by the sender's domain, but that isn't as consistent, and doesn't help at all when your email address has been leaked. It's true that you do have to set it up so that you can send email from the addresses to avoid not being able to reply by email, and you will want a password-manager or something to remember exactly what email you used, for convenience. Personally I'm glad I've done this, it's made it much easier to organize my emails. |
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This part:
> Especially since all these companies ask for and verify your cell phone number
is true, though.
and
> The one outlier is political campaigns: they'll share your email till the end of time.
Because politicians exempted themselved from anti-spam laws, as they do with most laws.