Hi everybody,

I’ve had a domain name at Gandi.net for quite a while, which included 5 email addresses as well, hosted on my domain. Now they’re however discontinuing this offer, it will now be €3,99 per month per mailbox.

So, I’ve been looking around a bit. I need a service that allows me to connect it to my own domain name, that actually allows IMAP instead of requiring a special client, and preferably should allow me to put up several mailboxes under the same account since I currently have mailboxes for some of my family members.

Security is not a concern since this is only intended to be used for the email I send and receive under my actual legal name, and I know better than to use email for confidential material.

Zoho Mail seems like a good deal, since they have 10GB per user for only €1,13 a month. I’m just afraid that my emails might end up in spam filters since they’re based in India.

  • @nous@programming.dev
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    3810 months ago

    https://proton.me/ Are worth a look at. The allow custom domains and I believe have IMAP support. Additionally they encrypt everything they store so are very good from a privacy side (at least as far as you can be private using email).

    • @Pechente@feddit.de
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      2310 months ago

      They only sorta provide IMAP. You need to run Proton Bridge on your computer and that program will connect to their service and provide a local IMAP connection to your mail app of choice. It’s all a bit hacky but works well enough.

      • GreyBeard
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        2510 months ago

        That’s a sign that they aren’t goofing on the encrypted part. If done right, they can’t decrypt your emails to hand them over on IMAP, so a bridge would be necessary to decrypt on your equipment, then hand off the decrypted mail to your IMAP client. It’s nice they offer that solution.

        • lemmyvore
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          210 months ago

          It’s a sign they use non-standard tech and lock you in progressively… while touting encryption at rest as a big advantage, when it doesn’t mean anything for email.

          The Proton bubble is one evil acquisition away from bursting.

        • @anlumo@feddit.de
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          210 months ago

          What’s the point with emails that were transmitted unencrypted over the Internet right before that? It’s like sending a post card via mail and then putting it into a safe at the receiver’s side. Sure it’s secure there, but that’s entirely pointless.

          • GreyBeard
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            210 months ago

            I wouldn’t say it’s entirely pointless. You are correct that by the nature of email proton has to be able to read it in transit, there’s no avoiding that, it’s how email(and SMTP specifically) works. But what it does mean is that proton can honestly say it can’t read emails once they move beyond their edge systems. Personally, I don’t use email for anything critical or sensitive without additional encryption.

    • Briongloid
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      410 months ago

      They are great, but much more expensive which was the issue. PurelyMail are the cheapest option.

    • @PlexSheep@feddit.de
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      310 months ago

      I use proton for my domains email too, but consider that their integration with other services is pretty bad. I haven’t found a proper tool for calenders sync, and email sync with thunderbird or other clients requires a extra app.

      The pro of choosing them is that you get all their services: VPN, password manager, storage, calendar.

    • @skankhunt42@lemmy.ca
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      10 months ago

      I moved to this from tutanota so I could have IMAP. No complaints.

      I like the GPG encryption option they have as it’s basically what I believe tuta does to their mail by default

  • @NuclearArmWrestling@lemmy.world
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    1810 months ago

    Fastmail is awesome. If you want to set it up as receive only, you can set up CloudFlare email forwarding for free and have it forward to your regular account.

    • @subtext@lemmy.world
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      410 months ago

      I’ve got Fastmail set up for myself (more tech savvy) and for my wife (it needs to ”just work” and easy like Google), and I’d say it’s a solid balance between wanting to do a bit more with the email and a rock solid just works email. At $5/mo (or $50/yr) per user, it’s not cheap, but I think the service is quite good and I’ve been extremely happy with the service provided. I also never have issues with SMTP access for my home server, I don’t think my mail has ever been sent to spam for any of my family or even sending reminders to my work email.

      Their iOS app has also replaced the default / native iOS mail app because it’s just that good, which is a nice plus.

      • @NuclearArmWrestling@lemmy.world
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        210 months ago

        The ability to see up sieve filtering is great too. I’ve got a massive script that automatically sorts and files away most of my emails.

        I want to like Proton Mail, but their sieve filtering kind of sucks, and with large mailboxes it slows down to an almost unusable amount.

    • @missilebumbler4t@discuss.tchncs.de
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      210 months ago

      I’ve also been extremely happy with fastmail. LOVE the subdomain addressing, ability to use folders or labels for organization, and the integration with bitwarden.

    • @Edgelord_Of_Tomorrow@lemmy.world
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      110 months ago

      Be aware that the Australian government’s Assistance and Access bill allows them to compel local companies like Fastmail, or even employees of local companies without the awareness of their employers, to implement backdoors in their software without informing anyone about it.

  • gabe [he/him]
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    1210 months ago

    I’ve used zoho before years ago, it’s pretty good. I currently do use proton personally as it has a good mix of stuff, including a VPN.

    • Engywuck
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      510 months ago

      Can vouch for Zoho. Cheap and realiable if one doesn’t need encrypted stuff.

    • @Wolfizen@pawb.social
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      10 months ago

      Zoho is great, especially for OP’s use case where they want to manage multiple mailboxes under the same domain. The Zoho cpanel can do all that.

      Also Ive never had my outgoing emails rejected.

    • Notamoosen
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      310 months ago

      Just adding that the base level is free up to 5 users is you want to sample it a bit before paying for more features.

    • FawkesGil
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      210 months ago

      Currently using Zoho for my small business and its been great. Bought a domain off of Namecheap for a price of a sandwich and used it on Zoho for free.

  • lckdscl [they/them]
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    310 months ago

    I use Migadu, they put restrictions on the number of incoming and outgoing emails, not the number of domains or addresses, it’s not as cheap as the ones you’ve mentioned but per year it comes pretty close.

  • @jonne
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    310 months ago

    I’ve had a great experience with Migadu.com. if your use case is many domains/aliases with light use, it’s perfect.

  • lemmyvore
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    210 months ago

    I’m also in the process of leaving Gandi and I’ve written a post about it here.

    If you’re ok with leaving your domains and nameservers at Gandi you just need to edit your DNS records and point them to another email service.

    Migadu and MXroute work like you described, one account, multiple domains and mailboxes, they charge for what you use (mails and storage) not mailboxes. They will give you the DNS records to add to your nameservers.

    You can use imapsync to copy your mail over to the new mailbox.

    Check what it will cost to renew your domains, I had a surprise there too.

    You can also transfer domains to another registrar, which may offer a free mailbox with it like Gandi used to do.

    There are also other options, like using external nameservers. You can do any combo of domain registrar, DNS service and email service you want, ranging from having them all at one provider to using a different provider for each.

  • @darkstar@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    110 months ago

    Most of the services I know of are about $3-4 per user per month. Google, Amazon, and Rackspace are all either $3 or $4 per user.

  • ɐɥO
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    110 months ago

    Been using Tutanota for a year now. Never had a problem