this post was submitted on 29 Jun 2023
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Technology

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Email is an open system, right? Anyone can send a message to anyone... unless they are on Gmail! School Interviews uses two email servers t...

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[–] Chobbes@beehaw.org 1 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) (1 children)

I feel like step 1 is just buying a domain so you can have control over your e-mail address, and then you can switch providers whenever you want (or host it yourself).

If you already pay for extra iCloud storage you can use a custom domain for e-mail with iCloud... Many people are already paying for this, and if not it's only $1/mo. Apple's still a pretty big e-mail provider, so maybe that doesn't address all of your concerns, but it's a really cheap way to use a custom domain that more people should take advantage of imo.

I host my own e-mail and it's pretty care free these days (I don't send bulk e-mails, though, so I don't contend with rate limits at all). Honestly, more people should do it instead of buying into all of the fearmongering about e-mail... It's a little tricky to set up right, but the impossibleness of the situation is somewhat exaggerated. The best defense for self-hosted e-mail is if more people actually do it... Otherwise you're just capitulating to the large (and slightly less large) mail providers.

[–] beejjorgensen@lemmy.sdf.org 1 points 1 year ago

+1 on having your own domain. I was using gmail for a long time, and recently switched to my hosting provider's included-with-purchase email. Having my own domain made the move transparent to everyone, and relatively painless.