• I want to thank all the members that have upgraded your accounts. I truly appreciate your support of the site monetarily. Supporting the site keeps this site up and running as a lot of work daily goes on behind the scenes. Click to Support Signs101 ...

I'm looking for a safe e mail provider ? Suggestions Please.

decalman

New Member
Some local twisted scum-bag, that is well known to me, has hacked my emails. I can't even cancel the account.( yahoo) They are a joke.
I know plenty of others from the forum have had to deal with this issue too.
I've learned, don't ever get a yahoo or gmail account, or any of the mainstream accounts.
Can someone suggest a great secure email provider. Thanks for your input.
 

jtiii

I paid good money for you to read this!
I use gmail - how are they vulnerable? I definitely want to switch if it means I don't get hacked...
 

Pippin Decals

New Member
I use gmail - how are they vulnerable? I definitely want to switch if it means I don't get hacked...
I been using yahoo and gmail for years as well and no issues ever.Just make sure you have a heavy password with caps,numbers etc . the longer the better.....mine is over 10 characters long ,
 

decalman

New Member
I hate to be the bringer of bad tidings, but I've been checking this all over the internet, plus what I've experience, It only takes a few minutes to hack an email account, and they usually don't announce themselves. Changing the password doesn't work, if they're using "keylogger" I've pondered over the effectiveness of the 2 point authorization. It sounds good, but I would like to hear it from a geek.
 

CanuckSigns

Active Member
I hate to be the bringer of bad tidings, but I've been checking this all over the internet, plus what I've experience, It only takes a few minutes to hack an email account, and they usually don't announce themselves. Changing the password doesn't work, if they're using "keylogger" I've pondered over the effectiveness of the 2 point authorization. It sounds good, but I would like to hear it from a geek.

A keylogger would defeat any email or service that required a password, so a better bet would be to ensure you don't download anything that could have a keylogger in it, and also keep your anti virus up to date.

Regarding 2 step authentication, it works very very well,. I use it on Gmail and any time I try to log in to check my email from a different computer I get a text message with a 6 digit code I need to enter, I also get an email saying someone attempted to access my account, even if they aren't successful.
 

decalman

New Member
A keylogger would defeat any email or service that required a password, so a better bet would be to ensure you don't download anything that could have a keylogger in it, and also keep your anti virus up to date.

Regarding 2 step authentication, it works very very well,. I use it on Gmail and any time I try to log in to check my email from a different computer I get a text message with a 6 digit code I need to enter, I also get an email saying someone attempted to access my account, even if they aren't successful.

Hackers can I believe text you this stuff. They can send you authorization s asking for your password, using exact company logos, and ask for your password from a seemingly safe banner using an address such as this.... www.gmail.com seems very safe to click on, but it may be a false ID, then you click on it, thinking its really gmail, but it's got a hyperlink attached to it. You wind up at another site,-- and now you have virus, and your computer is controlled by some sicko.

The above link is only an example. I was just making a point. Theres no need to click on it.
 

OldPaint

New Member
i moved to MOZZILA THUNDERBIRD.
after XP, and installing WIN 7........which lost all of the email in XP...... the new LIVE MAIL, always seemed to have some qlitch. d//l THUNDERBIRD.........now i got a an email server that works...............
 

player

New Member
I stopped downloading my emails to my computer years ago. I keep them online, with my own domain email which I use online Roundcube. My other email is Gmail. I like to keep online because I can access all my emails from any online device and computer anywhere. I guess I should get it setup to keep the emails online AS WELL as download them onto my mail computer for backup... Maybe Thunderbird as Old Paint suggested.
 

GAC05

Quit buggin' me
I have not tried it myself but I have read that clintonemail.com is supposed to be super secure.....
 

WildWestDesigns

Active Member
Hackers can I believe text you this stuff. They can send you authorization s asking for your password, using exact company logos, and ask for your password from a seemingly safe banner using an address such as this.... www.gmail.com seems very safe to click on, but it may be a false ID, then you click on it, thinking its really gmail, but it's got a hyperlink attached to it. You wind up at another site,-- and now you have virus, and your computer is controlled by some sicko.

The above link is only an example. I was just making a point. Theres no need to click on it.


To my knowledge, none of your typical email providers would explicitly ask for your pass words. If you are getting asked out of the blue for any type of authentication, that would be my first concern.

Using a virtual onscreen keyboard may help a little bit. It just depends on how sophisticated the keylogger that they are using is. However, if there were able to get a keylogger on your system, I would be worried about getting that computer offline and I would just wipe the HD. Nice thing about running Linux and running VMs, it's not that bad to deploy backups to both.

I stopped downloading my emails to my computer years ago. I keep them online, with my own domain email which I use online Roundcube. My other email is Gmail. I like to keep online because I can access all my emails from any online device and computer anywhere. I guess I should get it setup to keep the emails online AS WELL as download them onto my mail computer for backup... Maybe Thunderbird as Old Paint suggested.

IMAP connection (versus a POP3) is what I like to use. Thunderbird does this very well. Which enables me to send, view etc on all of my devices. If I want to download and archive emails, Thunderbird allows for that as well.

MS did a very bad thing in the early years, some of which continues to this day, when they really integrated IE and Outlook Express (although I do miss Outlook Express) throughout the rest of the OS and, especially with Win 98, every user account and the same amount of permission.

Now, they have made changed to the UAC that helps from XP on (ironically most users don't take advantage of that, how many on here only run one account on their computer?), but that full integration of IE still persists for those that use IE on Win 7 and Win 8 (I don't know if it still exists with Edge in Win 10 or not, I would say probably so given MS' history, but I don't know for sure).

No matter what PC OS you use (Linux, Mac and/or Windows) or what email provider you use, quite a bit of the security of that device or whatever online services that you use, really depends on how you do things. What emails you open, what you download, what sites you view and perhaps the biggest thing, how secure are your passwords. Secure in IT terms is quite a bit different then what people think of as secure. At least in my experience.
 

Jester1167

Premium Subscriber
Never been a fan of business that use free accounts for email such as yahoo, aol, gmail, msn or your internet service provider... I have always felt it looks like a fly by night company, or if it makes you feel better uncommitted. In the grand scheme of things it doesn't cost that much for a domain and yearly fees. Now is the time to do it especially if you name is already taken because of all the new endings like .design .graphics ...
 

WildWestDesigns

Active Member
Never been a fan of business that use free accounts for email such as yahoo, aol, gmail, msn or your internet service provider... I have always felt it looks like a fly by night company, or if it makes you feel better uncommitted. In the grand scheme of things it doesn't cost that much for a domain and yearly fees. Now is the time to do it especially if you name is already taken because of all the new endings like .design .graphics ...

All of those accounts may or may not be free. Depends on the particular account. If you are getting it through your internet service provider, it's not free either (in fact, it could be quite a bit more then going the domain and yearly fees route, so it could be even more of a commitment in that respect). That's apart of the cost of going through that particular ISP.

I would make note, that if you paid for your yahoo account, you couldn't setup an IMAP account. It was either web based or POP3 if you went through an email client. I thought that was strange. That alone would keep me on a free account if I was going to the yahoo route. Now that might have changed, but the last time that I looked, that was how they did things.

I don't have that particular concern about free accounts. Mainly because I used to get a lot of flack for not having a .com site. It used to be that if it wasn't .com, something was off about it. That has changed though, especially since it's harder for everyone to get .com sites.

In of itself, what could be a free account extension doesn't bother me as much as what is going on with the email itself.
 

Fred Weiss

Merchant Member
We've had our own domains for 20 years now and for most of that time we used an online email virus and spam filtering service named Postini. It was great. Anything questionable was held online for review where you could either delete it or OK it for download. They were bought out by Google and eventually Postini was blended into Google Apps ($50 a year). Google Apps also has a feature that allows you to use a quasi naming setup that makes it appear your email address is your own domain. It's still gmail but it's gmail on steroids.
 

SignBurst PCs

New Member
In my opinion, nothing wrong with the likes of Gmail, as long as you are smart about your password, security questions, etc.

If using security questions, be aware that many can be answered with a a little knowledge of the person who owns the account. You are especially vulnerable to someone that knows you on a personal level. It is not always best to answer those truthfully.

As mentioned above, use STRONG passwords and two step authentication is a great thing.
 

jtiii

I paid good money for you to read this!
I'll just leave this here...
http://xkcd.com/936/
attachment.php
 

Attachments

  • password_strength.png
    password_strength.png
    90.8 KB · Views: 119

Solventinkjet

DIY Printer Fixing Guide
Hackers have PASSWORD CRACKING software. All they need is your email address. Thats all.

Password cracking software usually works by taking information about the person such as birth date, kids names, pets names etc. and using that to guess the password by using different combinations of those bits of information. You can also brute force passwords by guessing every combination of numbers and letters possible but if you have a strong password it would take the rest of time to brute force it. Email addresses are very hard to crack unless you give out too much information about yourself, click on links you shouldn't have and/or use a very weak password.
 
Top