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Needs your API key as it needs to access the email forwarding service which you want to use with it.

It's not just making up a bullshit address, it's generating a random localpart then going to the email forwarding service you've integrated and having that service create an email forward to your real address per whatever settings you have there.

Any email sent to the address it generates (signup confirmations, password resets etc) need to get to you, after all.

This design is completely different to using <business>@example.com. The latter is kind of useful for your use of 'who has sold my address' but has privacy drawbacks this design doesn't. e.g. if a spammer gets bestbuy@exmaple.com they know you prob also have twitter@exmaple.com, facebook@exmaple.com or whatever else and it's all just the same guy with the same inbox.

Truly 'random' addresses at generic forwarding services means that if Ashley Maddison gets breached again then your secret remains safe. sj4h3bd@forwarder.net could be anyone.




> It's not just making up a bullshit address, it's generating a random localpart then going to the email forwarding service you've integrated and having that service create an email forward to your real address per whatever settings you have there.

Fair enough - the one I use automatically creates an alias whenever it receives an email at the relevant domain so there's no need to manually create one, I assumed the other services were the same.




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