It's kind of a pain to manage a mail server. Even if you have SPF, DKIM correctly setup and you are not on any common blacklists, you constantly have to fight for good deliverability - some mail server solutions will simply reject you no matter what. You might be on some obscure blacklist nobody uses and then you have to waste time sending blacklist removal requests. I personally run my own mail server, but route outgoing emails via Amazon SES. Gives me all the benefits of having my own mail server (domain aliases, extensions, custom spam filter etc) and saves me from the pain of managing outgoing reputation. -- Filip Hruska Linux System Administrator Dne 12/3/17 v 16:12 Jean | ddostest.me via NANOG napsal(a):
If you plan to use it for a small group of people, you should consider hosting it yourself. You could set it up with SPF, dkim, dmarc, ipv6.
It could be seen as a personal challenge to achieve.
Then if you need real privacy, you will need to encrypt with public keys like PGP or S/MIME. You can upload your public key to the public pgp key servers. I guess that one day this thing will be very popular.
Challenge accepted?
Jean
On 17-12-02 05:20 PM, Paul Ferguson wrote:
On Sat, Dec 2, 2017 at 1:35 PM, Michael S. Singh <michael@wadadli.me> wrote:
I am in need of some suggestions for some privacy conscious email providers. I am currently using Migadu [...] I use KolabNow, based in Switzerland, for a lot of personal e-mail communications. They are very, very privacy conscious:
--> https://kolabnow.com/feature/confidence
They are *not* free, but quite reasonable, and I am quite happy with the m.
- ferg