> Am 01.10.2018 um 18:54 schrieb Kenneth Porter <shiva@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>: > > --On Monday, October 01, 2018 6:37 PM +0200 Peter Eckel <lists@xxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > >> I fully agree with most of the former, except for the Google part. Google >> is to privacy what a shark pool is to a carp. If possible, avoid Google >> at all cost, and particularly for E-Mail. There are services around that >> cost a very small amount of money (e.g. mailbox.org or posteo.de), >> provide a very reasonable service and do *not* peek into your mail for >> advertisement targets and sell your data to their customers. > > Fastmail looks attractive to me as it's IMAP-friendly. I run my own server but I'm recommending to my family that they move their accounts there if I "get hit by a bus". > > <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/FastMail> > > I mostly run my own server because it's easy to create an infinite number of disposable "plussed" addresses as website login names. I've got a sendmail rule that lets me use a dot instead of a plus sign in such addresses to get around the websites that refuse a plus sign in an address. > > <http://mozilla.wikia.com/wiki/User:Me_at_work/plushaters> > >> You should also run your own DNS in that case, as many modern features of >> secure mail services are tightly linked to DNS (e.g. SPF, DKIM, DMARC >> etc.). DNSsec is preferred. > > This can be split. I let my hosting provider host my public domain name on their DNS servers. But I run a caching nameserver on my mail server to do the various lookups it requires. A forwarding nameserver for blacklist lookups is NOT recommended because of the way the various DNS-based blacklisting databases license their service. > I run my own mail-server on FreeBSD and qmail (setup mostly using a script from Matt Simerson: https://github.com/msimerson/Mail-Toaster-6). I need to re-do it at some point. I’m always debating moving to Zimbra (OpenSource Edition, or Zimbra Suite). If I wouldn’t run my own, I’d probably switch to Protonmail. Fastmail is also an option. DNS (authority) is best run at your hosting-provider or even at a specialized DNS provider, depending on requirements. Everything else is just asking for trouble. _______________________________________________ CentOS mailing list CentOS@xxxxxxxxxx https://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos