What e-mail services are Sup Forums approved?

what e-mail services are Sup Forums approved?

None

Tuta & Proton.

Email address with nigge.rs

>actually using german email

You either use a kike e-mail service or a shady one.
The shady ones might even stop existing one day removing all your data.

Use gmail, just accept the fact that you're going to get watched no matter what.

None. The only thing approved by Sup Forums is running your own mail server.

Google Mail

>Proton
They route all emails through Mossad servers

>e-mail services
>trustworthy
Here's a tip from me OP, get some good homing pigeons. Raise them yourself to make sure they wont "phone home".

Cockmail

Openmailbox.org

Say I wanted to create and run my own mail server. How would I do it? Would I need to pay for a domain name?

postfix + mailman > facebook

Google it for fucks sake. There's plenty of tutorials that are way to long for posting here

If you can: your own mail server.

If you can't: Gmail for professional. Cock+PGP for personal.

You'd need a domain and a server to run the mail services on. Once you have both, go off and set up opensmtpd and dovecot. There are guides for both online.

After which add an MX record pointing at your mail server, and an SPF record restricting outgoing mail from your domain to that MX record.

Kolab Now + PGP.
Hosting your own email is not worth it for professional use. Too much work just to make it work.

yes.
I pay $7 / year for my domain, it is not really a big deal.
As for how, you need to setup the MX record from your dns and then just install the software on a computer you own.
I recommend iredmail to setup the mail server, but you can also just google how to configure postfix.

When you have that, you can get a cert with letsencrypt and then you can use the computer to host all the other stuff you might want.
I also use nextcloud on mine, so I have a web frontend for my emails, a calendar, contact sync and file backup.
Having a domain is worth every cent.

Where did you buy your domain from?

Not him but I'm looking at Mailcow. Will probably set Nextcloud on the same server with LXC too. Should be fun. How reliable is the spam filtering BTW? And Nextcloud vs Owncloud. Any recommendations on the stability and general use?

Outlook

I think it was godaddy.

Right now nextcloud and owncloud is identical.
Nextcloud is a new fork where they only have a open source part, no closed for business and open for private users nonsense.

I have used owncloud since version 6 and I can say that stability is horrible.
I used ubuntu, so that was a part of why it was so bad, but here is what I have encountered:
Owncloud contacted ubuntu because they were too slow with updates and ubuntu responded by making a package update that just deleted owncloud.
Another update wrote over my config file and suddenly it used a different database (moved everything over, but still)
Then they dropped support for calendar and contacts, so you had to enable them manually after each update.
Then there was an update where they separated the software into multiple repos, so calendar/contacts was out of sync and suddenly they stopped working.

I have not used nextcloud very long, the last time it broke, I just wiped it all and installed nextcloud and uploaded the data again.

I have setup dovecoat to handle spam, and I haven't looked at it since.
All people I email with is people I talk to in person at some point, so I don't think any of their email gets filtered and I haven't received any unwanted emails.
Adding filters is also very easy.

What I have experienced is gmail and outlook.com might filter my messages, I don't really know how to fix that other than to tell people to add you as a contact.

test

Very interesting. Thank you. I think I'll just use a privacy friendly provider for email as I can't afford to miss/not send any emails. Will go with Nextcloud for sure. Is the new Ubuntu package format(not sure what it is called) helpful?

Only Sup Forums approved email solution is to self-host

[citation needed]
Proton is the best you can get, aside from running your own mail server.

Carrier Pigeon

>self-host

terrible idea

I usually get a temp mail or i pay $15 a year for a custom server

>godaddy
Don't you GoDaddy though.

They might be cheap, but they are utter shit.
Any registrar but GoDaddy.

Do you know of any particularly good guides? The "all in one" solutions like iRedMail tell me that they don't work well with things that are already on the server (such as a web server, which I have already configured).

what is the issue with godaddy?
What other traits would you look for than price when it comes to domain shops?

Take one thing at a time.
Say you want to use something like LAMP (or whatever).
Then spend some time on how to setup / use the webserver and how to setup/use the database.
When you follow guides, take notes, wipe it and do it again without the guide.
The worst thing you can have is a config file you have not written and do not understand.

When you then use stuff like iredmail, or other "easy to use" solutions, you should at least know the changes on an abstract level.
Like if you host a website and suddenly after you installed something else, the default website is now something different, you should know how to fix these things or where to look.

As for where to find the guides, most big projects have their own documentation.
If it is an old project, debian probably has a good writeup on it.
If it is new, digital ocean have a lot of guides.

Don't expect server guides to be as well documented as desktop software.

> 34 replys no body post cock.li

>thinks your own mail server is secure
>claims protonmail is somehow better than tutanota

no thanks

See

nigge.rs mentioned

Self-hosting is a terrible idea if you don't know what you're doing.

Self-hosting is the only way to secure your email. Git gud.

>Self-hosting is the only way to secure your email. Git gud.
Not if you don't have a fixed IP.
Many mail-servers won't accept mail from portable IPs. For security, you understand.

Gmail

>tutanota
Herr Merkel is so trustworthy!

Mail.com

Why?

Yandex