Hacker News new | ask | show | jobs
by crizzlenizzle 1473 days ago
> The truth is no one really sells your email – at least no legitimate companies.

Yes, but legitimate companies leak data now and then. I get metric tons of spam to dropbox@, linkedin@, myspace@, moneybookers@, etc.

1 comments

When I used wildcard support I got spam to :

linkedin@steve.org.uk

facebook@steve.org.uk

So I'd be tempted to think that my address had been leaked from there, but I also got other messages sent to addresses like:

admin@steve.org.uk

sales@steve.org.uk

support@steve.org.uk

In the end I figured that I was just dictionary-attack, and optimistic senders, and I could never be sure that a particular company had actually leaked an address.

These days I just give steve/at/steve.fi to everybody (I moved countries, hence the new TLD). I ported over all the aliases that had received email in the past five years and started rejecting unknown local-parts. That stopped badbots from mailing things that seemed like poorly-scraped message-ids "blah-blah-1234@steve.org.uk".