Something similar exists. Go to the Labs config page and search for "Mail Goggles". You'll have to solve some math before being able to send those drunk-mails.
A few ideas:
-Generate and give her a Google app password. I'm not entirely sure if it will work but it would be a great solution if it does.
-Setup a forwarder, so that all of your incoming emails are sent to another account. Perhaps your boss can create an email address specifically to receive these emails
-Link your Google account to her's. This would probably be the best solution. You can find this in the settings here under "grant access to your account".
Overall however, your boss needs to be educated on company security. This idea is terrible for more than one reason: it gives your entire company a single point of failure if that password list is hacked (as well as discouraging good password habits), it prevents the company from using two-factor authentication like you mentioned, it sure as hell hurts the trust relationship between her and her employees, and not to mention it's a horribly inefficient way of doing things.
Getting real tired of seeing Per shy away from a ball coming at him. edit: Image of what Per needs to stop fucking doing.
And this is why Ox shouldn't play in the middle yet.
http://www.fakemailgenerator.com
It generates a random email address that receives email for when you need to confirm a registration but don't want to use your actual email.
>I’m tempted to make a FastMail Electron app just to demonstrate that Electron/HTML/CSS/JS doesn’t need to mean slow and heavy (it just normally does).
>Later: OK, so on Windows a trivial Electron “just load https://www.fastmail.com/login(and then log in)” app uses ~230MB of RAM.
As a criminal defense lawyer, this is MA ...the most liberal state. Imagine Alabama.
Thank you Jaylen. As an extremely young man, you are wise beyond your years. I expect great things from you (on and off the court).
Good. They needed something to recoup their progressive bona fides after the Cuomo disaster.
Looks like the WFP got some input from people all over, this infographic was in their email to folks who voted, each dot represents a zipcode where at least one vote came from.
looks like they hit all 50 states
EDIT: deleted duplicate comment
I'm just a little confused as to why someone with that laundry list of fucking diplomas from Ivy League schools can't understand that you can't paste the url of a private reddit message for other people to see it.
Check out this funny email I got, guys https://mail.google.com/mail/u/0/#inbox
It may be easy to set up for you or me, but I wouldn't call it simple. And mail servers do follow the Murphy's law closely. Having your mail server die mysteriously when you are on a business trip is not a fun experience.
I don't use them myself, but I've heard good things about FastMail. They don't data-mine your email, and you can set up aliases and/or a catch-all at no extra cost.
I've had a good experience with FastMail. It's been really reliable at a decent price.
In case you're considering self-hosting, be sure to read up on things like mail server reputation and deliverability. I'm not saying not to self-host, but you should know what you're getting yourself into.
May I suggest https://kolabnow.com as well?
Also in Switzerland, even better webmail and access on your phone and for $40 a year I think its a pretty good deal. They do not require your phone number, address or anything like that.
They actually take Bitcoin/Bitcoin Cash payments (as well as paypal etc) and I've been using them for some years with excellent service.
Last I checked, protonmail did not take Bitcoin Cash, so for those that want to be anonymous or use their actual BCH, the kolab is the way to go.
I use iRedMail, which essentially pulls packages from the repository you use and brings them together for you. It uses Postfix, Dovecot, Apache, an SQL DB, OpenLDAP, Cluebringer, Amavisd, SpamAssassin, ClamAV, Roundcube, Awstats, and Fail2ban.
This is very good advice except for 2. Running and maintaining https://mailinabox.email/ on a privately owned server has been trivially easy for me and I have very little experience in Linux and CLIs.
Actually, I ran 6.2
"Not a sysadmin, use linux as a hobby"
Please don't jump into this lightly. A lot can go wrong.
I built my own docker image to run my email, syseng for a living, but https://mailinabox.email/ is highly reviewed
Yeah in the lab section https://mail.google.com/mail/u/0/#settings/labs once you turn it on and save then you can set the time in https://mail.google.com/mail/u/0/#settings/general, (EDIT: For some people this option might already be in the main feature set if you can not find it in labs then its probably already enabled so check in General Settings).
It works by not actually "undoing" the send, but by delaying the send by upto 30 seconds so you have time to go "Oh shit, I forgot to attach that file..." or "Oh fuck, that was the wrong bob..."
I swear by it, just wish they would put it into their Android GMail app too.
Bloody Typos :-p
A poisoned DNS is bad, but not THAT bad. If I type https://mail.google.com, but get a poisoned DNS redirect to Russia, you'll still get the big OMG WARNING!!! GET ME OUT OF HERE!!! screen if they don't have a trusted SSL cert. If they've gotten control of a trusted CA, though, they can make a cert that looks like Google, passes any inspection you care to give it, and you would have no way of knowing that you're really talking to Russia (without doing a trace route or something else wacky).
Two brilliant ads from '16 were made by supporters. The best was "Together"--so good the campaign bought it: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nyhfJTFJHu8
It’s been described as the “best political advertisement in American history” and it’s not hard to see why. It's the most powerful political ad I've ever seen. Directed by Jonathan Olinger, Created by HUMAN.
A couple of young people in the Netherlands put together this video out of Bernie’s heartfelt and humble answer to the ‘spirituality’ question. https://mail.google.com/mail/u/0/#search/best+political+ad/FMfcgxmNwfqWdMJlvgfBWlFPxVMccvCL?projector=1
it's just a game where you have a frog in the middle and every time you tap it it cries, there's also a bunch of numbers at the top and when the frog cries the number decreses.
here's a screenshot https://mail.google.com/mail/u/1/?ui=2&view=btop&ver=1fgay5d0tt4uk#attid%253Datt_16030711caa1d43f_0.1
PS: the link thinks that the app is gay
Keep in mind I've had it for almost 9 years.
EDIT: To imgur it is!
EDIT 2: Hopefully imgur doesn't want to fuck me like Google does.
Check out the podcast Reply All. They have a recurring feature, "Super Tech Support", where they investigate weird tech issues like the one you described. This is the kind of thing that there's a good chance they'd like to explore and get to the bottom of. You can send them a message here: [email protected]
> curl -s https://mailinabox.email/bootstrap.sh | sudo bash
NO! No no no no no no no. Do not pipe things from the internet straight into a root shell. I don't know how this trend got started, but holy shit is it bad.
Two privacy issues.
Firstly Telecommunications (Interception and Access) Act 1979. - https://www.fastmail.com/about/privacy.html
Secondly, because their servers are based in New York they don't have data sovereignty - the communications get caught up in PRISM.
That said this would apply to most email providers, at least they do not appear to be selling your data or mining it for analytics. It is a pure and simple email provider. The web interface is not free software but it can be run via POP3, IMAP etc.
Good service.
Anyone have thoughts on the best way to discuss? Do you prefer a private or public discussion? If I posted something like "[Tao Te Ching Book Club]: Chapter 1 Discussion" on r/taoism and tagged all of you that would like to join, would that work for everyone? The discussion would still be up for others to join that way, or we could find something more private for just our group, like a private subreddit, email, Facebook group, etc.
Also, is daily discussion too much, or would once a week be better?
Most of what I use isn't in the official repos, so it's more a lot of wget and manually downloading things. But I always install:
Python 3.7 from source DBeaver CE Google Chrome Keybase Newset GoLang from source
On my servers, though, it's easy. Just apt-get to install curl, then mail-in-a-box.
You can rent a cheapo Ubuntu VPS for $5 or $10 a month, and setup your own mail server with mail-in-a-box, which is stupid-simple to use. It automates literally everything, including renewing your SSL certs with Let's Encrypt. If you can do nothing but ssh into a linux server, you can do this.
Is this founded on your being more comfortable troubleshooting linux mailservers, or on an assumption that it's got to be easier? Exchange isn't really a bad option for the what you're replacing it as.
I'd go with Zimbra, though, it's the least-disappointing thing I've ever migrated anyone off Exchange onto.
https://mailinabox.email/ is great if all you want is the email bit, but if you've got a working Exchange server then chances are people are using calendars and contacts and all the other groupware good stuff.
FreeIPA can do some of the AD stuff (like auth) but not the GPOs that you don't need, if you run a fileserver then you'll probably want some sort of centralised auth.
If you are looking for alternative email providers, consider Tutanota or KolabNow's email-only package. The latter is ran by people from Free Software Foundation Europe based in Switzerland, and the former uses end-to-end encryption that takes place on your computer (YMMV on whether it's better or worse than using GnuPG on other email providers).
After failing to migrate to either Replicant or Cyanogenmod, I bide my time while uninstalling all system apps (Google and Samsung) on Android I can get away with. I'm so annoyed that changing Android distros is not as easy as changing GNU/Linux distros; if Android is free software, I shouldn't encounter such vendor-locking situations.
https://mail.google.com (or https://email.umich.edu will redirect you to it) and enter your and then it will send you through Weblogin to authenticate. (source: work for ITS in the Identity and Access Management team)
the only workaround is to use domain-specific URLs.
so the reason you need to put your username into Google in the first place is so Google can determine your account's SSO settings and redirect you. The only way around it is to use/favorite domain specific service URLs which will redirect straight to Azure and then back into that service after sign in.
Domain specific service URLs by default look like this SERVICE.google.com/a/YOUR_PRIMARY_DOMAIN (for example a generic account's Gmail URL would be mail.google.com/a/contoso.com), and there are service URLs available for the core Google services(Drive,Calendar...etc) but isn't available for less common services like the admin console. Using these links is also the only way for a SuperAdmin user to sign in via SSO.
To avoid getting caught in spam filters you can either rent a vps and hope that the ip you get isn’t blacklisted (there are some blacklists for ip ranges owned by cloud providers), or you can use a service like outboundsmtp. There are more providers for relaying smtp, but I personally use outboundsmtp, because it’s free if you don’t send more than 1000 mails per month. For setting a mail server up you can use something like mail-in-a-box. The most time consuming part for me is, like any server I set up, maintaining and securing that thing.
After some ten+ years running my own, I recently switched to https://mailinabox.email. So far, I'm happy.
Tiny speed bumps, mostly caused by myself being stubborn (I've always done it this way, mailinabox should do it my way), the setup is very robust and reasonably easy to setup. Very easy if you are experienced in Linux sysadmin (and not too stubborn).
Everything that has the smtp port open gets a lot of attempts to relay spam. If you don't intend to run a mail server, just disable postfix. If you do run postfix on purpose, please make sure to secure it.
Having been through the adventure of setting up a mail server a couple months ago:
Mail is pretty non-trivial. Compared to setting up apache for basic web serving, configuring a fully fledged email server is the difference between microwaving a hot pocket and baking a cake (not sure why I felt that analogy was needed.)
That being said, there are solutions out there that do a pretty decent job of prepackaging things for you. I've heard nothing but good things about iRedMail (although I haven't toyed with it myself.)
Personally, I find that I always end up tinkering with the internals of things like this, so I took the approach of setting up postfix + dovecot + roundcube from scratch. If you're security-minded and willing to learn, I used a fairly comprehensive tutorial that resulted in a very good setup (I deviated at several spots, but it still turned out well.) In particular, the author covers push notifications, which I really needed (I swapped d-push for z-push, but pick your own poison.)
I don't think I can give you a direct comparison as ultimately email and search are too very different beasts.
A big part of our privacy comes from our decision to not store your data, which can't be done the same way by email providers.
At the end of the day it's about finding a company you feel you can trust, reading the Privacy Policy and making a judgement call.
Personally, I do really like Fastmail they have a Privacy Policy that is clear and easy to understand: https://www.fastmail.com/about/privacy.html - they outline the influences of their jurisdiction, what happens to any data stored, and how it is handled if you delete your account.
(Note this is a personal endorsement not an official one.)
I have a similar setup, not sure what OP uses but I use Fastmail. I have it configured with my own domain and have any email sent to @mydomain.com just go into my normal inbox.
Yeah, thanks for letting me know. It's because of https://html.brow.sh/https://mail.google.com I'm working on a fix now.
Edit: It looks like it's now marked as safe again and unblocked, can anyone else confirm?
Seyer reponds to memo sent by Podesta titled: Walnut Sauce? He says; 'Hey John, we know you're a true Master of cuisine and we have appreciated that for years...https://mail.google.com/mail/u/0/#label/APolitical/160079999b7d16ab The bigger the MOUTH the MORE INVOLVED!
Gmail hides the sender's IP as a matter of policy. Here is their page on impersonation which actually is just a link to the Internet Crime Complaint Center of the FBI.
Your account was hijacked. It's hard to say how, but you might have some malware with a keylogger on your system (check that!), or you might have accessed them on an insecure system (e.g. internet cafe), or an insecure wlan.
Please make sure you follow this checklist so that the intruder can't access your account anymore: https://mail.google.com/support/bin/answer.py?answer=50270
Also, be aware that this forwarding might have been there for months already - the warning system was only added this week. The attacker has already seen all your emails, so if you have additional account passwords in there, or bank data, or anything other dangerous, change it now.
As a last tip, activate two factor authentication for your account, so in the future, if your password is compromised, your account is still safe.
Lots of these types of posts lately. All those approved seemed to have been in reconsideration previously. I have not seen one single EIDL increase approval, from anybody with a 2020 EIDL loan and who requested an increase on or after April 6th, via email to [email protected] and/or made an loan increase request, via their SBA account portal, on or after April 21, 2021. We are in the very large group of "your loan modification request is processing", since April 22nd, in our case.
Run your own email server. Look into mail in a box. I think that's what it's called. I'm running one on a vps, which can cost as little as a couple bucks a month. You can get a domain for a buck a year.
I have a mailinabox server running on a DigitalOcean instance for my personal email @lastname.com, which also supports sending mail. Trying to send mail from a consumer ISP's IP address block is futile; nothing will take it.
What you are looking for is sender_dependent_default_transport_maps (http://www.postfix.org/postconf.5.html#sender_dependent_default_transport_maps) Example: /etc/postfix/main.cf
sender_dependent_default_transport_maps = hash:/etc/postfix/sender_dependant_default_transport.map
/etc/postfix/sender_dependant_default_transport.map
@example.com :smtp.example.com @example.org :smtp.example.org @example.edu :smtp.example.edu
Don't forget to run "postmap /etc/postfix/sender_dependant_default_transport.map" after editing a Postfix hash file, and then "postfix reload"
There are already plenty of services like that—FastMail, for example. Pretty much any paid email service is going to have completely different priorities from Gmail because they don’t need or want to show you ads.
I got it and emailed him back at [email protected] to say I never want to receive a text message from him again.
I don't know if this will help in your situation. When I deleted a circle on accident a few months ago I was able to get them back from gmail's contact page. https://mail.google.com/mail/?tab=Xm#contacts click more -> restore contacts.
export first just in case
https://mail.google.com/mail/?shva=1#search/derp/p2
<derp> is search term, and p# is page number. awkward, but you can directly modify the URL. What also bugs me is that you can't set to display more than 20 messages.
Actually, it only saves you about 5/100ths of a second (assuming you have a decently fast connection).
$ curl -w %{time_redirect} -L -o /dev/null http://gmail.com
% Total % Received % Xferd Average Speed Time Time Time Current
Dload Upload Total Spent Left Speed
100 18749 100 18749 0 0 77385 0 --:--:-- --:--:-- --:--:-- 77385 0.064 <--- Time taken by all redirects
$ curl -w %{time_redirect} -L -o /dev/null https://mail.google.com/mail/?shva=1#inbox
% Total % Received % Xferd Average Speed Time Time Time Current
Dload Upload Total Spent Left Speed
100 18915 100 18915 0 0 73706 0 --:--:-- --:--:-- --:--:-- 73706
0.152 <---- Ditto
EDIT: Just read this output again and noticed that it's actually the gmail.com output that's faster. Ha! I probably get redirected to a login page on the second one, since I'm obviously not logged in. Ah well, whatever.
So uh... do we need to worry about the can being empty tonight? Don't remember them doing this for any round one game. (links to 25 dollar 'buzzer beater' tickets for game one)
Pasó es que lo pensé compa jajaja https://mailinabox.email/ No es posible, aunque dudoso, que Yoss hubiese quedado libre si efectivamente el control de plazas. No es cierto, que si tienen el mismo pasillo, y es inteligente != ser inteligente De hecho es un subreddit los únicos inútiles en 2021 capaces de justificar sus disonancias cognitivas 😂.
Use mail in a box.
Almost idiot proof and handles all the TLS and DKIM crap mostly for you. You still need to add the txt records to your DNS and that can be a pain but Mailinabox is the easiest email server I have ever set up.
There are configuration options that could cause a mail server/client to reject mail from a client that HELOs with a non-DNS name. For instance in postfix, it's http://www.postfix.org/postconf.5.html#reject_unknown_helo_hostname .
Whether or not this is the actual problem, you have a bigger problem -- if you are paying for a company to do email for you and they can't get HELO configured correctly from the start, then my gut says a lot more could be wrong and trying to get them to fix it is going to be a huge pain. You might want to cut your losses and investigate alternatives.
Unless you're planning on expanding in the future, I'd suggest opting for one of the big-name mail hosting services for a single account (Google, Microsoft, etc).
Beyond that, I'm a huge fan of mailcow.email - It's probably a bit more resource heavy than you're looking for, but it makes everything an absolute breeze to manage.
I used to maintain a mail stack (non-mailcow) for my own single account/domain uses and it eventually became too much of a chore for me to continue with.
​
Edit: I see you're looking for hosting suggestions more specifically (I can't read) - On that front, any of the larger name VPS/Cloud server providers would likely meet your requirements at a reasonable cost.
Or just use a similar, FOSS email solution. https://mailcow.email/
Seriously, all the things that cloudron offers can be done with ease though plenty of other things, without limits and for free. It's a glorified apt wrapper.
It was funny when I saw my phone blinking about having an email. It said 2214 emails in my inbox. That was unusual..
So I wrote some filters and shortly most of the mail went to the junk folder. Count stands at 16500 mails.
I have to hand it to https://kolabnow.com for handling it like it was nothing and naturally the fact that they take Bitcoin payments.
It didn't disrupt my work at all, and it makes me laugh. And it makes me sad that this is what Bitcoin came to. Although I can't say I'm surprised.
Let me know if you get anything out of that criminal investigation!
Fastmail.com. Left Gmail for it, never went back, worth every single penny. Plus it’s, fast.
(Edit: apparently I have a referral link for it on my account. If you decide to use FM, consider hooking a buddy up: https://www.fastmail.com/?STKI=12015577)
I switched to Fastmail and love it. It's like $10/year for a basic account which suits me just fine. No ads, good privacy policy and I've never experienced any technical problems. I couldn't recommend it enough.
I thought about this as well, but I didn't look into how to integrate a separate existing webapp into Nextcloud. I'm using rainloop as the web client for my email, and this exists as a Nextcloud app as well (when it seems that Nextcloud integration was an afterthought). So maybe this is possible? Once the project matures I hope that others look into it.
Rainloop is a clean, responsive webmail, you can configure it for any mail provider.
CipherMail is another, much more complex solution.
> the reminders are intertwined with emails. NO OTHER EMAIL CLIENT DOES THIS, AND THIS IS WHY INBOX IS SO SPECIAL AND STILL HAS VALUE. With emails and reminders combined into one seamless list (and turbocharged with the snooze feature), Google has created one of the best productivity dashboards I've ever encountered
I'm holding out hope that google is still working on something big in this area. In fact I'd be willing to bet that "productivity dashboard" will be a good description of Google's next major GSuite product announcement. Perhaps it will be a separate product, but more likely I think it will be released under the Google Tasks brand.
Here's my thinking:
At work, I use Gmail+Calendar+Keep+Tasks as my "productivity suite", and it's obvious that these are all tightly integrated on the backend. But the lack of a single dashboard where it can all be seen and managed together is quite striking. And with inbox gone, there will be no single point where reminders can be viewed.
The "new" (re-skinned) Google Tasks came out a few months ago and as yet they haven't done anything with the old canvas view (https://mail.google.com/tasks/canvas). They could easily have re-skinned that by now, but they haven't. Also, they've added zero new functionality to Tasks since it was redesigned. To me, all this points to something bigger being worked on in the background. I find it hard to believe they would put all that work into redesigning the Tasks front-end in gmail, and building the Tasks app, if there weren't some bigger plans to improve the underlying features.
I wouldn't be at all surprised to see something like this coming out before Inbox shuts down for good. Time will tell I suppose.
Edit - apparently this video was possibly edited by Reebok to make it look like one continuous shot. The jury is still out. Regardless, it's impressive and Sid has moved over to CCM after hearing of Reeboks dishonest motives.
Edit 2 - Sid did not move to CCM because of this video. That was an attempt at a joke, albeit a poor one but who really would have believed that? Wow.
Edit 3 - This is getting out of hand but as /u/50mHz points out, the puck that appears next to Crosby is the puck he slapped, it bounces back clearly in the video. Still not sure about magical puck on the boards though.
Edit 4 - Proof to substantiate edit 3: https://mail.google.com/mail/?ui=2&ik=eed9640311&view=fimg&th=14fbd57353be33fd&attid=0.1&disp=inline&safe=1&attbid=ANGjdJ9P1YAIHpeKTrl2IOfcJ_pJh4gwzTl2PP5oe6A4N-fNRJ9eHtsM1OPuNXu5iNj-upn4S5KuIYDT5KM54AIOK5Y2wU9Furr1CTva...
Server: NA
Type of Bug: In-Game HUD and Screen Bug
Description: After opening the shop I usually crash however a few times the whole screen turns black with the HUD and my name still showing. I can't press any keys either, not even to exit, forcing me to restart my Mac.
Video / Screenshot: https://mail.google.com/mail/u/0/?ui=2&ik=706f9c1051&view=att&th=14ebd57913a827ae&attid=0.1&disp=safe&realattid=f_icguw46c0&zw
Steps to reproduce: Open shop at beginning of game then wait in base for a bit
Expected result: My game usually has to be reset like other Macs are experiencing as of late
Observed result: My game's screen turns black like this occasionally instead of freezing
Reproducion rate: Semi-Rare 4/10 times
System Specs: 15 inch MacBook Pro Mid 2010 2.53 GHz Intel Core i5 Processor Intel HD Graphics 288 MB
EDIT: In the second photo the white color on the black color seems to be a big reflection of my map in the bottom right corner.
It's been there for years in labs. I no longer see it in labs though. Is it in https://mail.google.com/mail/u/0/#settings for you? Should be labeled "undo send" with a box to change the amount of time to delay.
You answer is the gmail html interface.
https://mail.google.com/mail/?ui=html
80 character fixed, cross platform, no need to install yet another program, save draft function, "application" integration with firefox.
Overstock.com but it's out of stock and the price is kind of high. I have some left over mdf board that I think I will make it out of since it will be painted to match our trim anyways. ~~My drawing of what I think I will make since it matches our trim better...more craftsman style.~~
EDIT: Link fail...and yes, it should be very easy to make.
> "She didn't know that email accounts change your name without alerting you or making it obvious
It adds the Profile name, that's the expecte behavier if you want something else edit your settings https://mail.google.com/mail/u/0/#settings/accounts
> , as well as creating shadow social networking accounts that you never have used
This is in the Terms of services anf if the account was created before g+ was around there was a notification e-mail about that.
Once again don't blame others for a clear layer 8 error
>for some reason this logic doesn't follow.
Yes it does. Those are ads that only you see. Ads in the signature of your email remind professionals of hotmail and other shitty webmail clients. Google will never do this. From their own site:
>(6) It has ads. But only good ads. Gmail isn't a traditional webmail account. There are no pop-ups, untargeted banner ads or warnings urging you to buy more storage. Gmail, however, will often place a few highly relevant, text ads adjacent to the body of your email. You'll also see links to related web pages you might find of interest.
These ads and links are displayed automatically using the same technology that powers our AdSense system, which delivers targeted ads to thousands of sites across the web. Computers scan the text on a given page, perform a mathematical analysis on it and match it to ads in our extensive database. No humans are involved in this process and no one reads your mail. You may find that hard to believe when you see how closely the ads match the topic of your message.
https://mail.google.com/mail/u/0/#inbox/FM1cgxwLsJtBqGfLzxjRrBxSBTISbqrQ?projector=1
Or https://mail.google.com/mail/u/0/#inbox/FM1cgxwLsJtBqGfLzxjRrBxSBTlSbqrQ?projector=1
I guess i just wasted my time cuz you can't access it lmao anyways
So, as I understand it, Google can't/won't read any of your emails or view/read any of your Google Docs. That said, if, for example, a G Suite user is signed into their account, opens a new tab, does a Google search, clicks on a link and watches a YouTube video, then yes, that history is recorded by Google. They have a way to clear it out, but they do record it and what, exactly they do with it I can't say.
That said, there is literally no way I am aware of for an employee to use Google Search and watch YouTube without Google knowing/tracking. An important distinction here is that in both cases (really), Google still only knows about what the search was, what link was clicked on, and what video was watched. They don't then go in and read your email to get ideas of what else to show you ads about.
To answer your other question, if you are at https://mail.google.com reading your GSuite email, that isn't tracked/no ads are shown/they don't scan your email. If you go off of Gmail to another site though, even some Google sites (like YouTube), all bets are off and they (and many other sites) might start tracking you.
Gsuite is less about tracking though and more about data privacy. Take HIPAA for example, HIPAA relates to reading/disclosing medical records that (for example) might be in your email or Google Docs if you were a medical office. HIPAA has no relation to if your sales guy spent the afternoon watching YouTube videos of cats. That information is not protected by HIPAA in any way.
Google lists what they consider their "core" services here:
https://gsuite.google.com/terms/user_features.html
With those things, you can expect privacy. With anything not listed (YouTube, Google Search, etc), you generally can't.
SPRINGFIELD – The Illinois Department of Public Health (IDPH) today announced 1,980 new cases of coronavirus disease (COVID-19) in Illinois, including 50 additional deaths.
Currently, IDPH is reporting a total of 45,883 cases, including 1,983 deaths, in 96 counties in Illinois. The age of cases ranges from younger than one to older than 100 years. Within the past 24 hours, laboratories have processed 12,676 specimens for a total of 227,628.
For all personal protective equipment (PPE) donations, email [email protected]. For health questions about COVID-19, call the hotline at 1-800-889-3931 or email [email protected].
*All data are provisional and will change. In order to rapidly report COVID-19 information to the public, data are being reported in real-time. Information is constantly being entered into an electronic system and the number of cases and deaths can change as additional information is gathered.
Selfhosting emails can be a pain.
I personally run mine with my ISP (they also maintain my dns). They also provide spam filters and some various checks
If you are looking to selfhost, check out mail-in-a-box https://mailinabox.email/
Here's a guide to choosing the right email. I would recommend Tutanota though.
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You could host your own email - Mail-in-a-box.
Or you could just run it yourself, which is what I do. The simplest way is probably Mail-in-a-box, but unfortunately that doesn't seem to implement CardDAV, which OP would want for synchronising contacts across different platforms.
My own stack is fairly simple:
This sounds like a lot, but it's actually pretty easy to set up.
in general, I always recommend disabling all outside access and running an openVPN server. That way you first connect via VPN and then connect to any service you want.
Once you know what you are doing, you have to check each service individually to make sure there are no major weaknesses. Make sure the docker containers only have access to files they need. This is hard because for example the transmission docker needs access to all you drives in order to write but who knows how much security they have? Same for sonarr and plex.
My preferred setup is this:
This setup will protect all your services behind a VPN, protects your home IP and you don't need to worry about old/bad services not keeping up with their security.
Openvpn has clients for win, mac, linux, android. All work with certificates if you want extra security.
I also recommend getting a decent router if you want to do that. At the very least, get a $40 linksys and install DD-wrt.
I'm sorry for commenting but not being of much help. But I sailed those waters before and I do not recommend it to anyone. Maybe you should look into something similar to Mail-in-a-Box https://mailinabox.email/
Wish you the best of luck!
It's for outbound mail. To get past almost all basic spam filters. That's why they care about pointing out the hostname matters. That said, serv1.server.com is fine. If you want it to be something different you can edit the config of your MTA.
Apache/nginx have nothing to do with sending or receiving mail.
Postfix lets you do this via the smtp_tls_policy_maps setting. An example is included there. You would want either the verify
or secure
level; encrypt
doesn't perform any authentication whatsoever and will gladly accept an expired selfsigned certificate for example.com.
The documentation doesn't really make it clear that the only difference between those is the default match
setting, which you can also override. verify
is hostname
, which means the server will need a cert matching gmail-smtp-in.l.google.com
(or whatever the MX record points to). secure
uses nexthop, dot-nexthop
, which would effectively mean that it would need a matching certificate for gmail.com
. You can also customize the match yourself.
Other MTAs, I don't have the slightest clue.
You'll just want to familarize yourself with postfix for the RHCE; don't ever waste your time on sendmail unless you hate yourself or inherit an environment that's already using it. Check out the docs in /usr/share/doc/postfix-*/ or at http://www.postfix.org/postfix-manuals.html. Read the architecture overview for what's going in master.cf (which you shouldn't need to touch unless you're doing advanced submission or filtering). And the basic configuration doc for main.cf, which has various things you might need to toggle (trying not to give away what's on the test). Presumably you already know about /etc/aliases and how that that works, but if not, it's a good thing to know for redircting things like cron mail.
Hijacking top comment to add gallery of 48 images "You won't BELIEVE #21!"
At least 26 dead.
edit: 35 dead, 3 missing
I read about this story from another news source and they had a side by side comparison of the suspect and the composite sketch. Damn near a dead ringer.
Have a look at https://mailcow.email/
I have just started with it an its impressive.
I remember the pain with running it by myself.
But if you want to run a email server.
The hard part is not receiving and filtering... The hard part is to get emails out!
So a dedicated IP is needed. For a small installation a small VPS can do the trick.
Not really, I ordered a VPS at DigitalOcean checked if the IP is on any of the biggest blacklists and been using it since then. Gmail, Outlook, all the big ones accept the mail.
But I use https://mailcow.email/ instead of mail-in-a-box.
He could have just created a fake account here: http://www.fakemailgenerator.com/
It gives you a random eMail address, and you will get any eMails sent to it in your browser, until you close the page. I've found it rather useful in multiple occasions.
I'm no programmer, and I guess being a sysadmin helps a lot, but I've ran my own mail server at home on an old hand-me-down computer for years. Linux + Zimbra make it easy. There are viable, turnkey alternatives to Zimbra these days too. This http://www.iredmail.org/ is getting popular.
First off, a disclaimer: I'm a network/security geek. This is what I do for my home. You may find it to be too much work for you.
I've got multiple systems in place. For starters, I've got a hosted box at a co-location center. It runs Debian. Standard hardened install. In chroot jails, it runs apache to serve up the family website for photo sharing, etc. If I want to send family pictures via facebook, I post them on the web server, then link them. (This allows me to control the content. Items hosted on Facebook become FB's property)
In another chroot jail, I run iRedMail. (http://www.iredmail.org/) It operates as the mail exchanger for my family domain. For the kids mail, I've got whitelists pre-setup, so only pre-approved senders (or domains as you wish) can send email to the child. There's a web mail front end so they can access it via a web browser, or can use Thunderbird.
At the home, I've got Cisco network, configured with WCCP. The WCCP system re-directs all web traffic to a local DansGuardian/SQUID proxy server. I have a certificate installed on all the systems at the house that trust the cert on the DansGuardian box for all SSL encrypted traffic. I maintain multiple SSIDs. Only the kid one re-directs traffic through the DG box. The "guest" is a straight punch to the Internet. There are others for specific purposes.
Last but not least, all the computers in the house run Linux, which reduces the risk for malicious infection, and the kids accounts do not have privileges to modify much.
It isn't fool proof, but so far it's proven to be "teenager" proof, when we had some house guests for a week+.
If you prefer a browser client, Fastmail's easily the best I've used: it's light weight and extremely snappy.
I use Outlook at work and agree with others that its browser client's okay, but it's nowhere near as light or responsive as Fastmail. It often takes a few seconds where Fastmail is near-instantaneous.
Lastly, sorry to say the obvious thing, but people sometimes forget that it's there: if you're willing to entertain a desktop client, don't forget to check out Mail.app.
The downside to Fastmail seems to be that staff have the capability to access your data, and they're very upfront with that fact on their website: https://www.fastmail.com/help/ourservice/security.html#staffaccess
Might as well recommend fastmail.fm here (if you are open to paying for email), it was already fast compared to the old gmail interface, but as I keep my old gmail address around because of the fun mail I get (I have with a very common combination), I once a week or so check it. It's such a horrible experience, it's actually funny.
I don't think it inoculates him, though the party and MSM Establishment is dancing hard to do that.
But I also think we run a risk in focusing on his inappropriate touchy-feelies to the exclusion of the vulnerabilities in his record. We need to keep critiquing his problematic votes that most people don't know about. We also should inform people about his son's largely unknown overseas business ventures.
More people should see this allegation that Biden's one of the most corrupt VPs in history and decide for themselves: https://mail.google.com/mail/u/0/#search/Biden+corrupt/FFNDWLvvwcpKghlJRqFtDcrVTLwqCmpj?projector=1
I use both google at work and personal. I keep the seperate. But when I studied I kept them together. I did not get that many study related e-mails that I wanted to keep the seperated from my personal. I just kept study related stuff together with my private. You could have two calendars if you want.
My work and personal I keep seperated. I have a bookmark for my work e-mail and work calendar, and for my personal. I only check work e-mail while at work.
You can be logged into both and access them as https://mail.google.com/mail/u/0/#inbox and https://mail.google.com/mail/u/1/#inbox
I cannot add my work calendar to my personal due to restrictions I cannot change, but I'm okay with just having two calendars to look into. (I could add my personal on my work but I choose not to) On my phone I have both synced.
Gmail's still alive and kicking, however Google introduce a "feature" to redirect Gmail to Inbox automatically (maybe it was automatically enabled? I don't remember). The way I see it, you have 3 options:
Got this code for gmail
u/ronan125 please check this and implement if possible
If there was no such warning, a malicious website could switch to fullscreen mode and display something that looks just like your OS+browser without you knowing it. After that, everytime you think you interact with the browser chrome (switch to another tab, enter something in the URL bar, etc.), you in reality interact with the malicious website. Say you then want to open Gmail and therefore enter your password on what you think is https://mail.google.com/. But in reality it's still part of the same malicious website, so now you've given them your Gmail password.
Of course this wouldn't work all the time and with all users (the malicious website's emulation of the OS+browser obviously can't be perfect, so there would always be a way to notice it), but it would probably work often enough to be a problem of a scale similar to phishing.
OK there's a few things here:
You can follow these directions to set up an email client of your choice
If you're tired of having to log in twice, just go to (or bookmark) https://mail.google.com/a/oregonstate.edu/. That'll take you straight to the ONID central login form and then redirect you to gmail.
If you have a personal Gmail account and want to switch between them, you don't have to log out. Just click on your user icon/picture on the upper right corner of the screen in Gmail, and click "Add Account". Then you can log into two accounts (or more) at once and switch between them using that dropdown menu.
With Single Page Applications you're most likely to track part of the state of the client in the URL (eg. think https://mail.google.com/mail/u/0/#inbox and the #inbox tells Gmail that you're viewing the Inbox page).
The links on your app would change the fragment part of the URL (the part after the #) and Secretary would execute different functions based on the routes you define. Secretary is able also to extract certain info from the URL (parameters).
The functions you call at different routes in the client may also perform HTTP requests to the backend using a library such as cljs-ajax. These routes in the backend are defined using Compojure.
Here's a snippet of a client route in an app I built:
(defroute home-path "/home" [] (if (@user "email") (swap! user assoc :screen :home) (GET "/api/userinfo" {:handler (fn [data] (reset! user (assoc data :screen :home))) :error-handler (fn [response] (reset! user {:screen :home})) })))
So when the client goes to the URL "myserver:8000/#home" it performs an HTTP GET to the route /api/userinfo on the backend.