What we really need is instead of an 'unsubscribe' button, a 'single combat' button where when we press it we get to fight the CEO of the spamming company 1 on 1
Congratulations, Dale Valskov I am relieved that you are out there fighting these thugs, We musttake every precaution to protect the elderly and the general public from these despicable con artists. Congratulations to You!! You deserve the Nobel Peace Prize for ensuring our security.
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Hey ppl, I'm a retired computer/IT person, Yet I still find Meta spy club so informative and straight forward. Thanks for your advise and helping the people...........Great work and love watching.
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Modern spammers can probably just detect everything after the plus, remove it, and send it to your standard email address. Not really that hard to bypass
Account of mine also got hacked and I followed the method as explained in this video but I'm unable to proceed after recording the selfie video. Thank you Dale Valskov . It brings me immense joy to witness his name appearing frequently in comments, a clear indication of the commendable work he’s been doing.
The Company assumes no responsibility for errors or omissions in the contents of the Service. In no event shall the Company be liable for any special, direct, indirect, consequential, or incidental damages or any damages whatsoever, whether in an action of contract, negligence or other tort, arising out of or in connection with the use of the Service or the contents of the Service. The Company reserves the right to make additions, deletions, or modifications to the contents on the Service at any time without prior notice. The Company does not warrant that the Service is free of viruses or other harmful components. External Links Disclaimer The Service may contain links to external websites that are not provided or maintained by or in any way affiliated with the Company. Please note that the Company does not guarantee the accuracy, relevance, timeliness, or completeness of any information on these external websites. Errors and Omissions Disclaimer The information given by the Service is for general guidance on matters of interest only. Even if the Company takes every precaution to insure that the content of the Service is both current and accurate, errors can occur. Plus, given the changing nature of laws, rules and regulations, there may be delays, omissions or inaccuracies in the information contained on the Service. The Company is not responsible for any errors or omissions, or for the results obtained from the use of this information. Fair Use Disclaimer The Company may use copyrighted material which has not always been specifically authorized by the copyright owner. The Company is making such material available for criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, or research. The Company believes this constitutes a “fair use” of any such copyrighted material as provided for in section 107 of the United States Copyright law. If You wish to use copyrighted material from the Service for your own purposes that go beyond fair use, You must obtain permission from the copyright owner. Views Expressed Disclaimer The Service may contain views and opinions which are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the official policy or position of any other author, agency, organization, employer or company, including the Company. Comments published by users are their sole responsibility and the users will take full responsibility, liability and blame for any libel or litigation that results from something written in or as a direct result of something written in a comment. The Company is not liable for any comment published by users and reserves the right to delete any comment for any reason whatsoever. No Responsibility Disclaimer The information on the Service is provided with the understanding that the Company is not herein engaged in rendering legal, accounting, tax, or other professional advice and services. As such, it should not be used as a substitute for consultation with professional accounting, tax, legal or other competent advisers. In no event shall the Company or its suppliers be liable for any special, incidental, indirect, or consequential damages whatsoever arising out of or in connection with your access or use or inability to access or use the Service.
It just kept glitching on me when I tried this video tutorial so firstly I would say thank you for the video and secondly, thank you Dale Valskov meeting you was a blessing in disguise keep up with the good work I'm sure a lot of people will be needing your assistance iin the nearest future after seeing this
Dale Valskov . I really appreciate your efforts and dedication towards the work. May God bless you to keep showing your worth and skills like this in the future
I'm literally overwhelmed, You are a blessing to the world. I can't thank you enough Dale Valskov for helping me with my account recovery. My prayers will always be with you and your team. Keep it up guys. Love from Maldives. There are many people out there I pray everybody get help.
In my case, I had no image of myself on it which clearly stated I am a step behind. Dale Valskov was God’s sent. I appreciate your tireless efforts in assisting me with the account recovery. Your professionalism and commitment to finding a solution were evident at every step. Thank you for making the process efficient and effective.
Kindly let me to express my sincere gratitude for the exceptional support and dedication Dale Valskov provided in helping me with business account. Your willingness to go above and beyond, investing additional time and effort, has been invaluable to me. The meticulous attention to detail and unwavering commitment you demonstrated throughout this process is truly commendable. Thank you from the bottom of my heart for your outstanding assistance.
Kudos to you, Dale Valskov for your extraordinary dedication and hard work in helping me recover my account. Your efforts are truly commendable, and I encourage you to maintain this exceptional standard as you embark on future endeavors. The path ahead is filled with promise for someone of your caliber
Some web apps can use validation to prevent you from inputting +, but asides that, using + gives other advantage like signing up to a service several times with the same email, can be useful for unlimited free trials offer
I have used this for a while and I have had quite a bit of spam. A few years ago, we had the new GDPR rules, and now I can roll up to a company's legal department, tell them "you sold my email address, I know because of the email plus system, pay me money" and I got paid every. single. time. The worst offender so far is Facebook.
@@kataseiko China is based af then. Every country that does not copy and apply the GDPR in its territory is corrupt and works against its own citizens. Simple as that.
I've used the "." trick but not the "+" trick. I run my own domain and give everyone a different email address. I use their name, date, and a random verification string so the addresses can't be reverse engineered.
@@ToroNero That's a great question. I've been doing this for years now and haven't caught any. I suspect the reason is my spam filter. Out of curiosity I'll look through my spam and see what email addresses are being used.
@@typeins5139 It's crazy because I can't find any instances of my email address being sold or shared accept one instance I approved. They only shared the address with the partners I approved so that's fine. The bulk of the spam email I'm getting are addressed to decade and decades old(one I've had for at least 25 years) addresses that were listed as contacts for my domain names at one time. That was publicly searchable information. I did find several legitimate emails in my spam folder though. At this point I might be better off without a spam filter. My domain contact information is private now so I can update those email addresses and filter anything addressed to those old email addresses. If this proved anything to me it's that the problem isn't so bad anymore. I'll continue to do things the same way though because someone will eventually mess up and I want to know who.
There are other aliasing like SimpleLogin (you can read more about this) but there are some companies that understand this alternative type of aliasing which blocks user from signing up.
You can put periods within characters in your email address and it will still allow emails thru, though you'll have to remember which places you put those periods in for Edit: Found out today this seems to only work with Gmail
alternatively if it's for a website you won't use often you can use websites like temp mail. that give you an email that lasts 10 minutes, doesn't work on all websites because of spam protection obviously but can help bypass "you need an account to read our clickbait.".
Unless you're dealing with money or something important, just use a trash email or even a temp email service if you only need to activate something once and don't care about using that account in the future.
I think you’ve missed the most important detail regarding the “+” email identifier in my opinion. For me the biggest benefit is using it to parse through login credentials exposed via breached data sets; this allows us to trace through which sites/services have been compromised. Doing this we’ve been able to harden our own endpoints against clients email addresses / credentials that have been compromised and even identified 4 breaches prior to the public being notified.
Except that many companies mark it as an invalid email if you have a + in there and thus won't allow you to use their site if you do that, and even if they didn't the company could still run a program to parse out the + and everything between it and the @, so really the only guaranteed way is to set up your own email service, create a bunch of individual accts for everything, and then have them forward everything to your main email inbox.
You should definitely use this idea. Just be aware that many places have a filter on that prevent you from using the "+" and some places are just behind the time and won't allow you to input a significantly long email address.
Behind the times? I suspect the RFC existed well before such companies had even thought of using email addresses so not so much "behind the times" more "ignoring the standards".
this is my biggest frustration. Ive used this for years but lots of places I've tried don't consider a + a valid symbol in an email. Some places dont even recognize other TLDs as valid.
Um. Recon their assets and Raise an ai army to counter strike their working force with incessant calls and emails to the entire company asking them if they would like to talk about their cars extended warranty.
it does allow you if it's a company with a good public reputation to contact them and tell them that they either sold the data without your consent - big no-no in EU thanx to GDPR - , some of their "trusted parties" aren't following the rules they set out in the privacy-agreement or that they have a databreach which they didn't knew about yet. yes, i have had all 3 happen to me. and i caught them all thanks to a similar trick using unique-per-requester mailaddresses with a personal domainname and a catch-all mailbox.
it not being worth sueing them, doesn't mean you can't sue them. however if they break the law, or not follow the agreements both them and you agreed on, you could. too bad, all those in "the land of the free", don't have the freedom of enjoying any privacy online.
You vastly overestimate how much spam companies care. So someone they're spamming knows where they bought it from...so? Spamming, like scamming, is targeted at the lowest common denominator. Its not that they *can't* - they're not going to put in work to bypass your avoidance or information gathering because they literally dont care
Then the spammers remove +servicename and boom. You don’t know who sent it anymore lol Hell, Google will probably remove it for them when they sell it to third parties 😂
Here is a similar tip. You can put a dot anywhere your Email address and whatever you're signing up for will thank its a different Email but will still go to your inbox. Also helpful to let you know who sold your data.
With Gmail, you can also place a period anywhere with your existing email address (preceding the domain of course) and you will retrieve those too. I use that when some sites don’t accept the + in their email field.
I received the most spam when I used the phish button on my email accounts to report the spam. Suddenly I started receiving 3 x the spam and it hadn’t stopped. How unusual eh?
I have experienced the same uptick after starting to report phishing attempts. Seems email providers have made ineffectual efforts to curb it so rather than reporting them I go into the trenches and investigate the abuse myself. Then when I do report it, instead of a paragraph they get an entire encyclopedia to sift through.
The reason for that is that the spammers can see if you interacted with their message. Its will tell them if you clicked on, opened, read, deleted, reported their message. Then they have automated response, oh we have a person interacting here and send more. I use the ignore conversation button on outlook and it seems to work without increasing spam
Plus aliasing is not secure and your main inbox address is easily visible (anything before the +) and a lot of services do not accept "plus" email addresses. You are better off using your own domain with catch-all enabled.
My apple iCloud lets me make any amount of random emails that I can use to sign up with, where it basically forewords emails from the company I signed up to my normal email, and the rest are on the extra one. I haven’t tried it but it might be useful
I did something like that when I had access to an exchange server at work. I'd create aliases for anything that required an email address (like to download drivers). It gave me the ability to immediately dump those emails once I was done downloading the driver/app/whatever. All email systems should support this (though we all know why it is not).
You can also generate aliases to your email through apps or websites what allows you do so. It makes sure to keep your original email protected so other side will never know what your real mail is and you can set those aliases way that whatever you send go through that alias so your mail will never be revealed
I did that with all presidential candidates in 2008 and Obama shared his list with Hillary and Biden no other candidate shared anything except them. I’m still getting Biden emails with Obama’s name on it.
been doing this with a catch all for about 20yrs, while it's a good way to identify sold emails often it just comes down to hacked websites then emails being used from those.
This is trivially easy to strip out. If you're serious about it then do a custom domain with a service that allows catch-all or infinite aliases. Then you can have a unique email for each service that can't be stripped. Bonus points if you make it less obvious too
that's kinda what i'm doing with a personal domainname and a catchall mailbox... fully unique mailaddresses - before the @ - each time specfic for each site or service i sign up for that '+' part is easy filtered out, spammers are smart enough for that, but they are stupid enough to think that 1 person only has 1 mailaddress and not unlimited ;)
@@CattopyTheWeb true, but you're often paying alot less than you would be paying to most of those data-breach services. and you don't have to give out the real mail-addresse you're using to sign into the mail-box or when sending mails. every phisher/spammer having some brains knows that everything after the + in a gmail-address is just a filter and isn't part of the real mail-addresse, none of them can be sure that mailA@domainnameX is the same person as mailB@domainnameX. nor that they all end up in the same mailbox (or not) ps: this often also allows you to assign mail-addresses that do end up into such spamlists to a seperate very small mailbox so any and all mails send to those bounce back 'mailbox full' - often also helping you to get those adresses automagically removed from such spamlists.
I wasn't looking at my phone the first time you said Stacy Lumps. And I love that whenever I turned to look at my phone while saying "Stacy Lumps? O.o", you were doing the same thing back at me. 😂
Thankfully I wont have to deal with spam anymore considering I got a job with one of the biggest companies in the world for my first IT job. Big thanks to you man, you've helped me so much!!!
Use this wisely. I once used this method to sign up on a government website. It failed to recognize this email after sign up and kept giving me an error saying: "incorrect email" because of the+ i assumed. So yeah... Use this wisely.
Yes, that works IF the other party's mail server supports it. Many companies AND some ISPs don't support this, even though it is a "required" email standard.
I've been using this for a while to register new accounts with the same email but it never occurred to me I could track my email being sold like this, genius
What we really need is instead of an 'unsubscribe' button, a 'single combat' button where when we press it we get to fight the CEO of the spamming company 1 on 1
Agreed.
@@NorthernChimpagree to agreed
or call a lawyer button, with this trick they are clearly identified.
Gmail actually has it sometimes, when it is able to figure it out.
I don't want to take on Zuckerberg, he will use his Robotic powers and royally fuck me over.
Congratulations, Dale Valskov I am relieved that you are out there fighting these thugs, We musttake every precaution to protect the elderly and the general public from these despicable con artists. Congratulations to You!! You deserve the Nobel Peace Prize for ensuring our security.
Yes please. I would love a video that does a deep dive on the *Metaspyclub* project
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Hey ppl, I'm a retired computer/IT person, Yet I still find Meta spy club so informative and straight forward. Thanks for your advise and helping the people...........Great work and love watching.
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Modern spammers can probably just detect everything after the plus, remove it, and send it to your standard email address. Not really that hard to bypass
Bubble burster...😂
You're right but we aren't there yet. You can also run your own domain like I do and create a different address for every service.
Who said that your main email is the one without a plus. You could just make it as a dummy email, to see who are this advanced spammers.
I don't think enough people use this method, spammers probably won't bother
@@jmrit can be done without getting your own domain by using any free email aliasing service
Your work speaks volumes of the kind of man you are. efficient, organized and result oriented well done , Dale Valskov you're soo good at what you do
Account of mine also got hacked and I followed the method as explained in this video but I'm unable to proceed after recording the selfie video. Thank you Dale Valskov . It brings me immense joy to witness his name appearing frequently in comments, a clear indication of the commendable work he’s been doing.
Metaspyclub anticipation is building to a fever pitch! 😥
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It just kept glitching on me when I tried this video tutorial so firstly I would say thank you for the video and secondly, thank you Dale Valskov meeting you was a blessing in disguise keep up with the good work I'm sure a lot of people will be needing your assistance iin the nearest future after seeing this
Dale Valskov . I really appreciate your efforts and dedication towards the work. May God bless you to keep showing your worth and skills like this in the future
I'm literally overwhelmed, You are a blessing to the world. I can't thank you enough Dale Valskov for helping me with my account recovery. My prayers will always be with you and your team. Keep it up guys. Love from Maldives. There are many people out there I pray everybody get help.
It's amazing what you do Dale Valskov We need a lot of people with your skills and set who have good intentions and spread love
In my case, I had no image of myself on it which clearly stated I am a step behind. Dale Valskov was God’s sent. I appreciate your tireless efforts in assisting me with the account recovery. Your professionalism and commitment to finding a solution were evident at every step. Thank you for making the process efficient and effective.
Kindly let me to express my sincere gratitude for the exceptional support and dedication Dale Valskov provided in helping me with business account. Your willingness to go above and beyond, investing additional time and effort, has been invaluable to me. The meticulous attention to detail and unwavering commitment you demonstrated throughout this process is truly commendable. Thank you from the bottom of my heart for your outstanding assistance.
Kudos to you, Dale Valskov for your extraordinary dedication and hard work in helping me recover my account. Your efforts are truly commendable, and I encourage you to maintain this exceptional standard as you embark on future endeavors. The path ahead is filled with promise for someone of your caliber
Some web apps can use validation to prevent you from inputting +, but asides that, using + gives other advantage like signing up to a service several times with the same email, can be useful for unlimited free trials offer
Oh shit brilliant
And the exact reason why trials are becoming less prevalent from blatant abuse like this.
Came to say just this thank you.
The dot trick should work for that
@@user-mc5wl7wx7z what is the dot trick?
Been using this for years. A lot of places won't allow you to use the plus sign when you sign up anymore. The webapp has an input filter.
That’s funny I won’t sign up for those then 😂
Interesting. Thx for sharing.
yeah some validate to deny special characters and such, but for the most part it works with most modern services, and just about any small service
@@1ronman1My ISP did it to me the other day. Either I used my normal email address or I can't get internet access.
Partially because they realized it can be used for things like sql injections.
Though this is possible reason too
I have used this for a while and I have had quite a bit of spam. A few years ago, we had the new GDPR rules, and now I can roll up to a company's legal department, tell them "you sold my email address, I know because of the email plus system, pay me money" and I got paid every. single. time. The worst offender so far is Facebook.
Does this work everywhere?
How much money?
@@konkenbonken About 500€ per company and incident. The official fines are much higher than that.
@@b0wking119 It works for most countries where the GDPR is in effect. So essentially all of EU and China. Yes, China has copied the GDPR.
@@kataseiko China is based af then. Every country that does not copy and apply the GDPR in its territory is corrupt and works against its own citizens. Simple as that.
I've used the "." trick but not the "+" trick. I run my own domain and give everyone a different email address. I use their name, date, and a random verification string so the addresses can't be reverse engineered.
Interesting.
how many shady companies did you catch?
@@ToroNero That's a great question. I've been doing this for years now and haven't caught any. I suspect the reason is my spam filter. Out of curiosity I'll look through my spam and see what email addresses are being used.
@@jmrtell us how it was
@@typeins5139 It's crazy because I can't find any instances of my email address being sold or shared accept one instance I approved. They only shared the address with the partners I approved so that's fine. The bulk of the spam email I'm getting are addressed to decade and decades old(one I've had for at least 25 years) addresses that were listed as contacts for my domain names at one time. That was publicly searchable information. I did find several legitimate emails in my spam folder though. At this point I might be better off without a spam filter. My domain contact information is private now so I can update those email addresses and filter anything addressed to those old email addresses. If this proved anything to me it's that the problem isn't so bad anymore. I'll continue to do things the same way though because someone will eventually mess up and I want to know who.
Some companies are aware of that now and they don't accept emails with a plus sign. We need another alternative other than creating new emails.
There are other aliasing like SimpleLogin (you can read more about this) but there are some companies that understand this alternative type of aliasing which blocks user from signing up.
You can put periods within characters in your email address and it will still allow emails thru, though you'll have to remember which places you put those periods in for
Edit: Found out today this seems to only work with Gmail
@@Krzys_D thank you, I'll try it
@@Krzys_D Sounds like a nice trick. I'm gonna write the companies names in morse code if they dont allow the plus trick.
alternatively if it's for a website you won't use often you can use websites like temp mail. that give you an email that lasts 10 minutes, doesn't work on all websites because of spam protection obviously but can help bypass "you need an account to read our clickbait.".
I use Firefox Relay. So no plus but completely random email.
If it's random, how do you track where they got it from?
@@osbjmg When it is created the interface saves a description of the web page. Guessing it either uses the TLD or extracts html header info.
@@EdBruceWRX ah, thanks for teaching me something new!
icloud has the same thing
Unless you're dealing with money or something important, just use a trash email or even a temp email service if you only need to activate something once and don't care about using that account in the future.
Imagine that account suddenly becomes important.
Setup several different address' for specific purposes.
There are temporary email websites
You can't even leave it alone for long time google will check inactive email 😂
I think you’ve missed the most important detail regarding the “+” email identifier in my opinion. For me the biggest benefit is using it to parse through login credentials exposed via breached data sets; this allows us to trace through which sites/services have been compromised. Doing this we’ve been able to harden our own endpoints against clients email addresses / credentials that have been compromised and even identified 4 breaches prior to the public being notified.
Except that many companies mark it as an invalid email if you have a + in there and thus won't allow you to use their site if you do that, and even if they didn't the company could still run a program to parse out the + and everything between it and the @, so really the only guaranteed way is to set up your own email service, create a bunch of individual accts for everything, and then have them forward everything to your main email inbox.
If you get newsletter from them and it's parsed out, you can easily speculate what their purpose of it was though
@@touma-san91 That's assuming they remove it for their own mailing purposes, and not just from mailing list that they sell.
@tatsu4935 It's easier to just use email aliases, and shut down any that get spammed.
No need to set up a bunch of individual accounts if you are using your own email service.
Just create one as a catch all
@AltonV That obviously is the more ideal method because then you control everything, but isn't what's being discussed here.
Yes, I do know about this, yes I do use it, but some UIs claim '+' is an invalid character when entering an e-mail address.
This also works on M365, but may need to be enabled for your organization.
What!? This is badass. Thanks Chuck!
You should definitely use this idea.
Just be aware that many places have a filter on that prevent you from using the "+" and some places are just behind the time and won't allow you to input a significantly long email address.
Behind the times? I suspect the RFC existed well before such companies had even thought of using email addresses so not so much "behind the times" more "ignoring the standards".
And then you'll find that half of mail scripts don't know how to correctly handle + in the mail addresses :)
this is my biggest frustration. Ive used this for years but lots of places I've tried don't consider a + a valid symbol in an email. Some places dont even recognize other TLDs as valid.
They say the most challenging thing in programming is to strip +anything off a text string. - Hackerman
Sarcasm?
Don't take headache. Just mark them as spam. They will always land in spam and clean your spam after month or year. You can set auto clean too.
It works: LIKE A CHAMP!
Nowadays spammers are the literate programmers.
Hat tip to you my good man. This is HUGE!
Bro made a Black Eye Peas reference.
so many site block plus addresses now sadly
So now you know some company sold your crap….now what? 😂😂😂😂😂
You can filter them and mark as junk more easily... I wish i did this 10 years ago...
Um. Recon their assets and Raise an ai army to counter strike their working force with incessant calls and emails to the entire company asking them if they would like to talk about their cars extended warranty.
You’re the coolest lumberjack ever dude!
Chuck you're an all time legend, love this!!!
I mean, great, but it's not like you can turn around and sue those companies
it does allow you if it's a company with a good public reputation to contact them and tell them that they either sold the data without your consent - big no-no in EU thanx to GDPR - , some of their "trusted parties" aren't following the rules they set out in the privacy-agreement or that they have a databreach which they didn't knew about yet.
yes, i have had all 3 happen to me. and i caught them all thanks to a similar trick using unique-per-requester mailaddresses with a personal domainname and a catch-all mailbox.
You can't sue, but you can set a custom filter on gmail to block emails from that specific email handle.
it not being worth sueing them, doesn't mean you can't sue them.
however if they break the law, or not follow the agreements both them and you agreed on, you could.
too bad, all those in "the land of the free", don't have the freedom of enjoying any privacy online.
I prefer taking more subtle and of course wholly ethical liberties
Can confirm, if we still want your email. This will not hinder us lol
Damn. Did really not know this. Thought he would mention the point which could be anywhere. Thanks for this.
Like Starbucks (or the company buying their addresses) doesn't know what a + in a Gmail address means 😂😂
You vastly overestimate how much spam companies care. So someone they're spamming knows where they bought it from...so? Spamming, like scamming, is targeted at the lowest common denominator. Its not that they *can't* - they're not going to put in work to bypass your avoidance or information gathering because they literally dont care
@@RamikinHorde True, but email sellers charge more for "clean" lists.
Most of these companies arent filtering their address, they are just getting them and adding them to the list of people to blast spam to
Then the spammers remove +servicename and boom. You don’t know who sent it anymore lol
Hell, Google will probably remove it for them when they sell it to third parties 😂
That's okay if your inbox is already set up to send anything wihtout the alias to your junk
Here is a similar tip. You can put a dot anywhere your Email address and whatever you're signing up for will thank its a different Email but will still go to your inbox. Also helpful to let you know who sold your data.
With Gmail, you can also place a period anywhere with your existing email address (preceding the domain of course) and you will retrieve those too. I use that when some sites don’t accept the + in their email field.
I received the most spam when I used the phish button on my email accounts to report the spam. Suddenly I started receiving 3 x the spam and it hadn’t stopped. How unusual eh?
I have experienced the same uptick after starting to report phishing attempts. Seems email providers have made ineffectual efforts to curb it so rather than reporting them I go into the trenches and investigate the abuse myself. Then when I do report it, instead of a paragraph they get an entire encyclopedia to sift through.
same experience here
The reason for that is that the spammers can see if you interacted with their message.
Its will tell them if you clicked on, opened, read, deleted, reported their message.
Then they have automated response, oh we have a person interacting here and send more.
I use the ignore conversation button on outlook and it seems to work without increasing spam
Hello, i need to access an account urgently but i dont have the login details. Please how do i do this😢
Did you solve?
Go get the login details?
Thanks Chuck keep the contents rolling…you got a Network godson from Naija 🤙🏾
use it all the time. thanks for spreading the word
Plus aliasing is not secure and your main inbox address is easily visible (anything before the +) and a lot of services do not accept "plus" email addresses. You are better off using your own domain with catch-all enabled.
It's a good option for those that don't currently have their own domain, for at least filtering the spam easier.
What is catch all?
My apple iCloud lets me make any amount of random emails that I can use to sign up with, where it basically forewords emails from the company I signed up to my normal email, and the rest are on the extra one. I haven’t tried it but it might be useful
Thank you. I had no idea this feature even exist.
unfortunately useless because the part after the plus can easily be removed.
I did something like that when I had access to an exchange server at work. I'd create aliases for anything that required an email address (like to download drivers). It gave me the ability to immediately dump those emails once I was done downloading the driver/app/whatever. All email systems should support this (though we all know why it is not).
In like 3 lines of js you can auto remove the plus tag
Thank you for letting these companies know this trick. Now we can expect more of them removing the custom tag
You can also generate aliases to your email through apps or websites what allows you do so. It makes sure to keep your original email protected so other side will never know what your real mail is and you can set those aliases way that whatever you send go through that alias so your mail will never be revealed
I did that with all presidential candidates in 2008 and Obama shared his list with Hillary and Biden no other candidate shared anything except them. I’m still getting Biden emails with Obama’s name on it.
I actually didn't know!
I wish i knew that 10 years ago
Dude, thank you from the bottom of my heart❤❤❤❤❤
been doing this with a catch all for about 20yrs, while it's a good way to identify sold emails often it just comes down to hacked websites then emails being used from those.
This is trivially easy to strip out. If you're serious about it then do a custom domain with a service that allows catch-all or infinite aliases. Then you can have a unique email for each service that can't be stripped. Bonus points if you make it less obvious too
I knew this method for labeling but haven't thought it would work to track spam mails
Thanks for not making it a loop, it's so cliché lately that I really started to hate it
Dude genius Thank you!
Dude you're brilliant.
that's kinda what i'm doing with a personal domainname and a catchall mailbox...
fully unique mailaddresses - before the @ - each time specfic for each site or service i sign up for
that '+' part is easy filtered out, spammers are smart enough for that, but they are stupid enough to think that 1 person only has 1 mailaddress and not unlimited ;)
Tho a custom email domain costs money
@@CattopyTheWeb true, but you're often paying alot less than you would be paying to most of those data-breach services.
and you don't have to give out the real mail-addresse you're using to sign into the mail-box or when sending mails.
every phisher/spammer having some brains knows that everything after the + in a gmail-address is just a filter and isn't part of the real mail-addresse, none of them can be sure that mailA@domainnameX is the same person as mailB@domainnameX.
nor that they all end up in the same mailbox (or not)
ps: this often also allows you to assign mail-addresses that do end up into such spamlists to a seperate very small mailbox so any and all mails send to those bounce back 'mailbox full' - often also helping you to get those adresses automagically removed from such spamlists.
@@soul_maestro i see, interesting.
Of course 1 address=1 person, but all those with @domainnameX are probably co-workers or relatives, no?
Yeah works only sorta, it either gets filtered or email fields outright refuse +addresses in the first place.
I wasn't looking at my phone the first time you said Stacy Lumps. And I love that whenever I turned to look at my phone while saying "Stacy Lumps? O.o", you were doing the same thing back at me. 😂
I’ve been using the feature in combo with filters so I can assure proper handling of certain specific email items.
I knew this, however many companies have been able to outsmart this and not allow it when signing up for services
Idea is good, I thought so many years ago. Issue is that a LOT of websites use crappy email verifying scripts, so they think plus sign is invalid
Best advice, thanks !
if only I had US$10 for every time chuck said, "I bet you didn't know this", and I knew it already; in fact, I've known it for years.
Same thing with periods too. you can add a period anywhere in your address to create an "alias"
I did something like this 20 years ago with my own domain. Practically no one doesn't sell your email address.
Thankfully I wont have to deal with spam anymore considering I got a job with one of the biggest companies in the world for my first IT job. Big thanks to you man, you've helped me so much!!!
Use this wisely. I once used this method to sign up on a government website. It failed to recognize this email after sign up and kept giving me an error saying: "incorrect email" because of the+ i assumed.
So yeah... Use this wisely.
I like plus addressing for services. MS Exchange has this feature as well. Not sure if personal Outlook accounts do, though.
Love your content Chuck ✨️
I assumed people already knew this. I’ve been using this for several years now.
Thanks Chuck!!
There are some websites that don't accept the + in the gmail like instagram and more
Now not just I have to remember the password but different emails for it too.
set up a dummy email that forwards to your main email but that's more technical
Yes, that works IF the other party's mail server supports it. Many companies AND some ISPs don't support this, even though it is a "required" email standard.
More of a provided feature from gmail than a “hack”
I use telephones and radio over 👽
For everyone saying a lot of websites ban the + sign, perhaps encoding it?
Used that for a long time. Apples hide my email feature is way better at this point.
Well that’s something new…. Thanks!
I've been using this for a while to register new accounts with the same email but it never occurred to me I could track my email being sold like this, genius
Thanks, man. this is a lifesaver
Brilliant!
the backgroud music is next level
Rad! Thanks!
Microsoft does this too, it’s called plus addressing
BLESS YOU!