DuckDuckGo Opens Up Its Free Email Privacy Service To Everyone (engadget.com) 41
Last year, DuckDuckGo announced a free service designed to fend off email trackers and help people protect their privacy. The Email Protection beta was initially available through a waitlist. Now, it's now in open beta, meaning everyone can try it without having to wait for access. From a report: Email Protection is a forwarding service that removes trackers from messages. DuckDuckGo will tell you which trackers it scrubs as well. During the waitlist beta, DuckDuckGo says it found trackers in 85 percent of testers' emails. Anyone can now sign up for an @duck.com email address, which will work across desktop, iOS and Android. DuckDuckGo says you can create unlimited private email addresses, including a throwaway one for every website, if you prefer. You can also deactivate an address at any time.
Whew, just in time ... (Score:5, Funny)
I was checking out a competitor "goose.com" but they kept giving me the run around ...
I used to have a procmail script that did this (Score:3)
1. Lets find our old procmail scripts ...
2. Turn them into "privacy-masking" services and collect the contents of everyone's personal email
3.
4. PROFIT?!
mutt (Score:3)
Re:mutt (Score:4)
You can do that in GUI e-mail clients too. Just disable remote images, JS (why even need that?), read receipts, etc.
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Ha. I remember struggling with mutt after using pine. :)
Any advantage vs just blocking images? (Score:3)
If you use an IMAP client and don't display external images by default, doesn't that pretty much accomplish the same thing?
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Typically the only emails where I want to see the images in are the ones from senders that I really don't care that they know I've seen their email.
Re: Any advantage vs just blocking images? (Score:1)
How tracking? (Score:2)
It was intersting to see the article about websites tracking people who use lockdown mode on Apple because i suspect such people use a VPN. I browse from Belize, so if people come looking for me they do so in one of the highest crime areas in the Americaâ(TM)s.
In any case, I think duck duck go is just trying to starve everyone else. The ads I get on the browser, the results based o. What they want to promote rather than what I
Re: How tracking? (Score:1)
MailScanner for self-serve (Score:2)
Check out MailScanner for self-hosted mail. It's been "defanging" my email for about fifteen years. Adds about a second of latency to a message when running in daemon mode.
Nice of duck to offer such things to the masses, since they mostly use surveillance companies for email providers. Yeah, I'm astonished too.
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Not private (Score:2)
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The "second" generation of the service allows replies to flow through their privacy tracking service, thereby protecting your email mailbox address. But if you do any adjustments to the email message (or change any of the headers, manually or automatically), then the process fails.
So, whatever you do, don't change the headers of the sender or recipient if it's truly a simple em
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So, whatever you do, don't change the headers of the sender or recipient if it's truly a simple email thread.
I didn't change anything. When I tried it, my true email address was presented to the sender as: "my true email address that I want to hide"_"private duck address"@duck.com
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So you sent yourself a message FROM user name@domain name.com and that's the reply address. Perfectly normal. You sent your FROM address when you sent the mail from your real account to the duck address.
No. I replied to a message that was sent to the private address. That reply I sent contains a FROM address which has an encoding built by duck.com that includes my true address. It's quite easy to parse my original address from that encoded FROM address (it includes "me"_at_"mydomain".com_"private"@duck.com). To be useful, the FROM address needs to hide my original address. That's how other services like this work. It seems to be a simple oversight. I'm sure they'll get it sorted, but in the meantime, don't
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So you sent yourself a message FROM user name@domain name.com and that's the reply address. Perfectly normal. You sent your FROM address when you sent the mail from your real account to the duck address.
No. I replied to a message that was sent to the private address. That reply I sent contains a FROM address which has an encoding built by duck.com that includes my true address. It's quite easy to parse my original address from that encoded FROM address (it includes "me"_at_"mydomain".com_"private"@duck.com). To be useful, the FROM address needs to hide my original address. That's how other services like this work. It seems to be a simple oversight. I'm sure they'll get it sorted, but in the meantime, don't trust this to keep your email address private.
Your FROM gets replaced with your DUCK address before it's actually sent to your recipients. That's what's happening. Your recipients DO NOT see your private address in their FROM field, they only see your DUCK address.
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Your FROM gets replaced with your DUCK address before it's actually sent to your recipients. That's what's happening. Your recipients DO NOT see your private address in their FROM field, they only see your DUCK address.
No. The private duck address that was replaced has the format I mentioned above and it reveals my address. The sender who originally sent to my private duck address now has my true address. I'm looking right at the header and it's there as plain as day. It's obscured, but very weakly, so even a casual inspection reveals my true address to the sender.
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Sally (sally@gmail.com) gives Joe privateduck@duck.com.
Joe sends email to privateduck@duck.com.
Sally receives the message and replies.
Joe sees "sally_at_gmail.com_privateduck@duck.com" in the reply
From that, Joe can easily deduce Sally's email address
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no password? (Score:2)
what if i wanted to access my email from a desktop or laptop with some other browser???
enquiring minds want to know...
Re: no password? (Score:2)
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I have been spamgourmet for years and occasionally hit that type of thing. I have taken that to mean that the site does not want me to register or use them. Luckily for most things there are alternatives.
Spyware disguised as a free service (Score:3, Insightful)
requires installing a browser extension or an app (Score:2)
dumbest decision ever
Sorry, not for email programs ! (Score:3)
"On desktop, you'll need the DuckDuckGo Privacy Essentials extension for Firefox, Chrome, Edge and Brave or DuckDuckGo's Mac browser"
If you look at that statement very carefully, you'll notice that those are all browsers. Nary an email program to be found. So how is it going to fix your email? Are there privacy conscious people who get their email from a browser?
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Simple, Stupid. (Score:1)
Isn't this just akin to "don't open images" in email?
Don't be evil... (Score:1)
Trackers in Email??? (Score:2)
That must be fallout from the utterly demented stupidity of mis-using web-browsers as email viewers.