Just about when I thought I got everything out of Gmail, I discovered my top favorite Gmail address tip. We have published over 30 tools in Gmail RoundUp 1Gmail Craze: 40 + Tools and Hacks for GmailGmail Craze: 40 + Tools and Hacks for GmailRead More and almost 80 tools and tips in Gmail RoundUp 2Ultimate GMail Collection: over 80 Tools and TipsUltimate GMail Collection: over 80 Tools and TipsRead More but never mentioned anything similar to this one. Tribute for this one goes to my ‘I am not into computers‘ type girlfriend.
In a word Gmail Dot trick works refers to the use your email id at various or multiple means. It snips your one or main mail id into multiple mail ids. To speak out more clearly, just signup with new mail address & use it all the way. Personally, I think this feature about Gmail is very convenient for users. Apr 07, 2017 Gmail Dot Trick for Get Unlimited Gmail Id’s From one Gmail Account [email protected]. You can also keep adding one DOT, after one digit. Add more & more dot like this in your Gmail Accounts. Email will be delivery on Same Gmail.
Let’s say that your email address is ‘[email protected]’, basically everything sent to any of the following email addresses will be forwarded to your primary email.
And that’s not all, you can place as many dots as you want, it can be even something like ‘[email protected]’ and you’ll still get it on ‘[email protected]’
A Gmail Address Tip You Can Put to Use
Additionally, I just also found out that you can embed random text to your email ID using ‘+’ sign. That is to say ‘GeorgeBush+anythingyouwant@gmail.com’ can be used as your email address, as well.
Ok I got it. Now what?
1. One email for every purpose
Instead of using different Gmail email addresses for various purposes (work, school, friends, etc.) you can use different variations of your Gmail and filter incoming mails by ‘sent to’ address. For instance, all incoming mail sent to ‘[email protected]’ can be put to folder ‘work’, messages sent to ‘[email protected]’ can be put to ‘friends’, ‘[email protected]’ can be used for newsletters, and so on.
2. Track/Block spammers
When signing up for some website, say thatwebsite.com, you can add thatwebsite to your Gmail user ID (eg. GeorgeBush+thatwebsite@gmail.com). This way you can block your subscription whenever you want and even identify those websites that distribute your email address to spammers.
UPDATE:
Hello folks, here is another EXCELLENT find for Gmailers. Download Gmail Cheat Sheet to learn and master keyboard shortcuts. You might be surprised how much faster you can get with them. Plus most are pretty intuitive so you won’t need to memorize them. You can download printable one page long Gmail shortcut sheet from here10 Essential Cheat Sheets To Download10 Essential Cheat Sheets To DownloadRead More.
More Tips? Surprise me in the comments.
Explore more about: Email Tips, Gmail, Online Privacy, Spam.
- Apnadar paea pori,amr ank asa haking sikbo but,kicutai parina pleace anybody help me...pleace
- Hey man,
I have created my google account year ago.may be in 2012.
Now i can't have access to these.
When i try to login an error msg comes (GOOGLE DOES'T RECOGNIZE YOUR ACCOUNT)
after creating account i did't log into my account too much years.
Can i regain my account - Adding either a dot or a + sign to the prefix before the @ sign in gmail addresses now renders them undeliverable in gmail. I don't know when this changed but it has - I tested it today: error message created in response from the Google mail server.
- I did not know that!
- thanks man! it's amazing
- very nice trick to track email address distributors. (Y)
- Nice post
- I am not sure it this still works now.
- It still does
- good to know
- Is this valid now ? This looks like a security bug . Has it been fixed ?
- Exactly how is this *security* bug?
- I need to find out the rest of this emai addresss:d*********[email protected]
- Really really useful. Thanks for the tip!
- Nice idea ;)
- Wow. I see it as a MAJOR ‘aw shit’ potential. Once Spammers see/understand this then they will send you ‘n!’ emails instead of one.
- not every web services accepts such emails. While it seems our subscription provider doesn't most online services do accept emails in such format.
- Well, I haven't heard of this tip, and it sounds great.I also hadn't heard of makeuseof.com, it also looks great.I wanted to print a guide, but I have to join. I know, I thought, I'll make use of that tip that I just read. So where my email is [email protected], I entered [email protected]Result? Invalid email address.Oops? (It's either you or me, and for a change I don't think it's me).
- THANK you! i appreciate this. and wonder why it took me a few yrs to find it? yikes! thanks again.
- Thanks for the gmail tips. I plan to set this up immediately.
- Freaking awesome! Thanks for passing this along.
- i know i've read this stuff somewhere before.
thx for bringing this up.
nice info. - same with mark before me, that its not working but thanks for the information
- I followed the said statement on the blog but it doesn't work. Why it is so...
- To all the idiots who say 'omg i already know this', or 'dude this sh*t is hella old!' this article was posted back in Sept of 2007. So don't pat yourselves on the back and think you're all L337 ninja mofos..
- Just stumbled across this Gmail feature... thanks for posting it!
- Already knew this, seriously.
- 'Gmail tip you don't know about'wrong. This is old.
- Good one!
- Nice TipsThanks
- excellent feature !!
- Wow. I see it as a MAJOR 'aw shit' potential. Once Spammers see/understand this then they will send you 'n!' emails instead of one. Bet gMail closes down this vulnerability.
- I heard the 'Something you haven't heard of before' speech many times and this time the result wasn't different: heard about it before, by people who knew they weren't the only ones. Good trip but instead of naming it that way just name it: 'Awesome Gmail Trick' or something like that. Ny the way: awesome trick.
- No it doesnt work anymore. The periods are not working. Gmail recognizes [email protected] and [email protected] as two separate email addresses, just like all the other mail services out there. But the + does work though.
- as the proud owner of the [email protected] address, I can assure you that I receive emails sent to [email protected] just fine and dandy.Also, if you actually considered sending an email to [email protected] after reading that, please reach over and turn off your modem. I don't want you on my internet >.<
- Looking at all these contentious posts about an attempt by their author(s) to be helpful and thereby increase website traffic, I'm reminded that human nature has not changed since sapiens evolved... and also that the colonization of space by a species such as ours is unlikely to produce a net gain in the quality of life in the universe.Personally I thought the tips were great. Thank You. And I await the scathing observations of the angry few about even these comments.
- Good One.
George Philip, Elevatta - Thanks Aibek for this cool tip - I'd not yet heard of it, and just tested it (and read Google's TOS about it) and sure enough, I got the mail without the dot, and with the + but when I added a numeral, it didn't arrive.Joyous holidays to you & all,
Donna - VERY nice post - thanks for discovering & sharing this great tip - now I want to test it & enjoy the extended capabilities.Joyous holidays to you & yours :-)
- test comment ... disregard it
- I already knew this ;)
- I'm not sure the +thatwebsite features is still working. Gave it a try, and came up with an error.@skype - thanks. and here I was typing the @gmail.com the whole time. nice one!
- Wow I'd like to harness all that brain power :)
I hope people go outside and get some FRESH AIR
awesome Blog/site.
Hope to get mine this happening one day Maybe :)
Peace
Stumbled- Thanks for the feedback :-)
- Liked It !!!
- The best feature of GMail is that is has an excellent spam filter!So I pass all my email that goes to my personal email address (eg [email protected]) to my GMail account ([email protected]) and then have my Outlook pick it up from GMail (via POP).Works MUCH better than Outlook spam filtering - AND I got a great webmail function too :-)N
- Nice to know. Will not use it though.What will happen to all your hours of email filtering effort if google change the way they handle email catching?
- Considering the hundreds of thousands (estimation ) of people who use Gmail, don't you think that if Google decided to change the way they 'catch' emails that they would make it backwards compatible with the existing system?
Why would they risk losing all of the Gmailers that they have? That just wouldn't make sense.
- Great tip! I've been using it, different addresses for forums, friends, school, etc. Thanks!
- Good feat, but....
a little off-topic : the reason i don't use gMail is it doesn't accept attaching exe files. :|- That can be solved very easily. I am not being sarcastic if I sound like it.
Put your .exe in a .rar archive and put a password on it.
I use WinRAR, but I'm sure that others might work.
If you just use a .rar archive then Gmail can still 'see' the program inside of it, but when you add the password it is like a . . . well, you get the picture, Gmail cannot scan inside the locked archive.Have fun!- Or, you can rename the file to something like .zipo or .raro and gmail wont realise it's an archived file. You just tell your friend to rename the file when he receives it and that's it :)
- Are you a Russian hacker? Who emails exe files?!
- cool nice find
- Awesome! Some e-mails with a lot of mail address of this type arrived to my inbox and I just felt impressed...
- This is seriously awesome!!!i love giving people my [email protected] is pretty sweet.plus managing subscriptions have become so much more easy..Really thanks much for this tip :)
- what if the spammers code a script to remove dots and everything between + and @...
- Is there a function on GMAIL, like that of Yahoo I could use in regards to sorting out emails?
Ex. Yahoo email. I get all me emails (to same email addrs), from there I can sort or check off on those I want to move to a different folder (say Bill confirmations folder / shipped out folder / video emails folder / moms BS folder etc.)
I'm told gmails version of this feature is different emails, so if billpay confirms I have to give out say h.eck@gmail or for my shipment confirmtaions i need to giveout he.ck@gmail rather than letting me sort them out myself? - Yahoo's disposable email feature is far superior. With their feature, if you start getting spammed on a disposable email address all one has to do to eliminate the spam destined for that email is delete the email address.
- Great way to manage email. I have used this for a few months now and functionality and flexibility that it gives you just re-affirms that Gmail is the top free email solution.
- I want to know the last exact time I have log in, in my gmail account?
- Woah. I defenately didn't know about that. I might try it myself and see if it works. :)
- No, this isn't a helpful tip.I had to cancel my gmail account because I was [email protected], and someone with my same name had the email [email protected] -- and I kept getting her email. She was a very busy wedding planner in Texas, and I kept getting solicitations from florists and churches, messages from her mother in the hospital, and love notes from her husband. I kept writing back to everyone asking them to be sure they had the write email, but nothing helped.i finally just cancelled the account. I was considering re-registering under a different name combo, but it sounds like if Google and Gmail think this is a feature, it won't help.And I'm not the only one with this problem.
- Ok, so, if my e-mail was [email protected] (with dots), and someone makes an email that goes [email protected] (without dots) I will get their emails? And additionally, it narrows down the choice of email address. People wouldn't be able to make an address that goes my.emailaddress, or myemail.address...etc. unless they put a number in it. (people do repeat email address - that's why there are so many with numbers in them...)
- I’m a gmail fan and this enhances my fondness for it. Thanks for sharing.
- Have a look at spamgourmet.com! It does this and more, so you have not to be affraid of someonelse getting your mail...
- Its a freaking bug. Say you want to receive someone elses email. Easy way to do it is to register an email address the the same as thiers .. for example if some one has registered [email protected], you can register [email protected] and you will get all the mail they get!Give it a go!!!
- Good logic. This has really scared me. I just tested it, and fortunately, google doesn't allow it. If some one has registered [email protected], jon.doe will no longer be available to register. In the same way if [email protected] has been registered, [email protected] will no longer be available to register.
- Good One! I didn't know that!
- say if a person creates a gmail account [email protected] but however say [email protected] is already registered then according to you gmail shouldn't allow anyone to register that name or if it does then all mails sent to [email protected] should go to [email protected] and that would mean a serious security breach, so i guess gmail wont allow you to sogn up....
[update] : well yes gmail dsnt allow !!!
n hey i tried signing up with $ in the username... it doesn't seem to allow :(Thanks - Interesting and possibly very helpful
- is it really a smart tip if GW's name is in the example?
thanx tho. - Coincidentally, I just covered this on the latest episode of the Gmail Podcast (chuckchat.com/gmail).
- Hey! I was having this random thought!
I wanted to play a joke on my friends for 2 days. So I was thinking to make them believe I am actually studying at Harvard! So how do you create a random fake uni email address that works? Anyone know that would be awesome lol - Knew about it. :)But yeah.. this is freaking awesome. If you're a business you can use it to sort where email is coming from without setting up multiple accounts, or a job seeker can give different variations on different resumes posted on various sites to track which one has the best use.Love it!
- Well all I know is this was news to me and after reading all the good debate (among the morons who think knowing something before somebody else is worth crowing about) I thought I'd go register my Google name [email protected] with a period in it [email protected] so that nobody else takes it. given that my first and last in this case are as close to unique as its possible to get this was more of an experiment than a real attempt to safeguard my mail but google disallowed the registration. I tried it with an even more unique first and last name i use and got the same thing.So yeah, Google must have taken steps at least to prevent this.
- Dang. Well I knew about the '.' trick but not about the '+' trick.... Thanks!
- So what.
- That's neat. How you guys find out such stuff? :) I use mailinator dot com when I know that signing up at some site will definitely end up receiving spam. But there I can not keep the mail. I love the trick with '+'!
- OMG.... Never knew it lol. Thanks for the gr8 tip :)Even then it can't be used as a space for spam mail registrations, we register with many sites to use some onetime feature and they will send promotion mails to that id.
- Dont use gmail,dont really understand what you are taling about, that was agreat 15mins of reading. Put that on the stage with 5-10 guys reading it out f...ing funny! Thank you all you where brill
- cool.
ive used
jondoe+SPAM@gmail before to denote spam. - This not new. I already knew this. You wasted my time. Again.
- Yet another user here with 'first.last'@gmail.com but NOT 'firstlast'@gmail.com.I just tested this trick with several combinations of dots, and received none of the emails, except for the one that was exactly the same as my address. Obviously, the system is not perfect, and as I have received several emails meant for this other person, he has tried to use the trick too.I don't know if I'm missing any email, but no one has commented on it.
- I'm a gmail fan and this enhances my fondness for it. It is terrific!
- I'm using your tips in this comment!
- dear,mslamb
i was crying alot i miss you so much and all the good things you did for us also samantha was crying to i was crying because i didn,t want you to leave i wish you were still our student teacher.also thank you for the stuff that you gave me and i will try to do my best always when i was crying i couldn,t stop thinking about you i just can,t stop but any way i hope you have a good weekend and merry christmas to you to bff but you are still the best teacher in the world and i,m crying right now why i,m typing i miss you sooooooooooooooooo much and i love you as a friend too good-bye ms.lamb i hpe you come back to visit us when we go back to school january,2.sinserly
quadriyyah harris - nice one! would be good to tell what website is selling your email address :P
- Its a great post.
- Enjoy! We got hundreds of cool posts.
- now i know..thanks bro..anyway, how did u know this tip?
- My girlfriend told me abt it. :-)
- Knew it long back, but never thought how this can be put to use. Good thoughts. Thanks
- I found out about this 'feature' when I realised that Google had allowed someone with the same name as myself to create an account with the same name as mine - except his email address had the dot separating his first and last name, whereas my account was created without any dot present.This bug seems to have subsequently been fixed by Google, as attempting to create 2 accounts with such similar email addresses now fails.As pointed out in this article, any emails sent to the address containing the dot also appear in my account, i.e. they get sent to my email address, the one created without the dot. As such, I know that my namesake plays rugby, is looking for a job (and earns less than I do), is interested in physics, and drinks too much alcohol too regularly.I've tried emailing the other user to inform him of this fact, but he has chosen to not contact me. Similarly, Google have ignored my emails suggesting this 'design feature' is in fact a security breach that, although has been plugged as far as creating new accounts goes, is still being inadvertently abused by myself and my namesake on a daily basis.
- 'As such, I know that my namesake plays rugby, is looking for a job (and earns less than I do), is interested in physics, and drinks too much alcohol too regularly.':-) :-) :-) ... Unbeliavable. I can just imagine what happens to the all the 'Smiths' out there.
- my namesake has a former employee who sent a note about how happy he was that my namesake was fired and that he felt he was the most pathetic human being ever to walk the earth, has copies of deeds and mortgages sent to his gmail account (he apparently flipped houses in the housing boom), searches for crap jobs in about every state these days, and sends some of his bills to the account. i let him know once but don't think he seems to understand how public his emails are!
- As stated above, I would assume this is a flaw of the system.... I'm glad that my email address isn't too common, otherwise my email might be getting sent to somebody else; I wouldn't care too much for that at all.
- Yahoo has had #2 for years. They're called disposable e-mail addresses, and they're available to anyone with an account. I think they're absolutely priceless, and I have personally created dozens of them. How they differ, though, is how you make them up. Instead of using your actual e-mail address, you create a fixed base name prefix different than your original e-mail address. Then you choose a variable suffix for each of your purposes. In between is a hyphen. So the end result is:
base_name-variable_suffix@yahoo.com. It's absolutely brilliant. Why it's better is because as some others have noted, with Gmail, any spammer with a brain could simply use your name before the '+' and still get through. With Yahoo disposable addresses, that's not the case. - VERY not impressed!
- This is definitely FLAW not FEATURE. My email address is [email protected] and I recieve emails intended for someone I DON'T know with the same first and last name - i.e. [email protected]. I'm sure the opposite is true. Fortunately for my counterpart, I ignore and delete emails intended for him. Fortunately for me I don't use this account for anything too personal!This is only an awesome feature if Google did not allow others to sign up with a similar address. Unfortunately that's not the case... Let's hope Google is listening.
- This is only an awesome feature if Google did not allow others to sign up with a similar address. - Google doesn't allow such sign ups, they treat both of the cases as one.see http://mail.google.com/support/bin/answer.py?hl=en&answer=10313
- You're correct, the same thing is happening with my account.
- this is an awesome concept...but reading some of these post makes me think this is half flaw and half feature.I don't think the period should be ignored, or 'filtered'!!Try omitting the dot on a URI, or in and image link path. why should email be different??
IMHO, email should follow this same protocol. - I got you one better -If you go to http://www.google.com/a you can sign up for gmail using yourdomain.com. You can configure a catch-all email address, and never give out the same email address twice, using your favorite gmail web interface, yet using your own domain name. (Of course you have to pay to register your own domain name, and you have to be techy enough to set your DNS settings according to gmail's specifications.) I use godaddy for this (something like $6 per year)I've actually been doing this now for about 5 years (just haven't been using google as my mail provider till recently) and it's awesome. :-)
- Very useful tips for people like me who have a lot of Gmail accounts to deal with.
- Hotmail definately makes a difference between [email protected] and [email protected] ....
- I don't know if any of you people read RFC's, but the specification for email defines an explicit use for the plus sign.
It is not a valid character for an email address. It is basically intended to define a destination folder or some other sub-destination specific to an email address.
So the plus sign is doing what it's supposed to do.
It's just not a popular feature so not a lot of people know about it. - Common man, first do a litlle research, this is from 2005 or something.Second so many comments on on something like this, we should be doing something else....
- Who cares? Gmail sucks anyway
- Some ppl here are getting p***ed off because this tip would mean their mail is sent to someone else, and then they start yelling at aibek, as if HE can help it. As if it is HIS fault that things work this way. In stead of yelling, just register a NEW account with gmail, and make sure there are no dots in it. And from now on, use that NEW account. It's that simple!Actually, if you registered a name with a dot in it BECAUSE the name without the dot was already in use, then it is your OWN DANG FAULT. Your head wasn't only meant to hang your ears on; it should contain something that's worth USING. Try it for a change! Only childish stupid dumbf***s yell at ppl in stead of using their brains.Sorry to everyone else for getting so worked up...
- Thanks buddy ;-)
- LOL !
- @ matelot, @smartGuyz, are you 12 ? 15? Tell us.
- Thank you - I didn't know about this tip....but then immediately I'm puzzled with the question: 'ok...my google account has dot in it -
so does the account WITHOUT the dot - likely owned by someone else - get a copy of the mail sent to me !!!!!?????I *think* this 'tip' you took the trouble to post is intended for people who DO NOT know about it - like me.But then you didn't have the consideration to offer ANY explanation, so FUCK YOU !!!- I already answered YOUR comment above. Defnitely check it out.
- duhMy point is you should have been more considerate and have the clarification/explanation in the post
- I'm thinking, not even 12.
- I've used this trick for years to signup for things with the same addy when it says I'm already registered or limits accounts etc.
- Hey Paul,
Nice to see you here ;-)
- You can do multiple dots too.kind of funny looking, but totally legal and it gets to you
- Not actually totally legal. The RFC for emails states that you can't have more than one special character (symbol) in a row in either half of the email address.This means that [email protected] is not valid as far as the RFC is concerned and your example: [email protected] is also not valid.[email protected] would be totally valid (but probably wouldn't end up at your gmail inbox).I'm not sure exactly how various mail servers deal with invalid email addresses but suspect that the don't all deal with them the same way so I would stick to strictly valid addresses.
- Actually, I did know about this tip. I've known it for three years in fact.
- My gmail account is [email protected]And there's a guy out there that has the account [email protected] . . . sometimes I get his emails. but he's never received my emails, so he claims.We've corresponded about the problem and sent emails to Google with no reply, of course. Eventually I convinced him to stop using the account. I told him if he didn't stop using the account, I might not forward him his email (some of it pretty confidential business stuff). I felt a little bad but I had the account first.Perhaps Google has since 'fixed' the problem . . . I don't know. Pretty interesting situation we had there though.
- wow are you sure ?According to this gmail help, this is impossible
http://mail.google.com/support/bin/answer.py?answer=29424- It's true. Perhaps google fixed it, but I'm also one with a [email protected] email address, and I have occasionally received emails destined for [email protected].Aibek, if you want proof of this email me privately. I will try to set the record straight.
- I think you are talking crap, somethingsomething and something.something ARE SAME. Considering current forwarding options there is no way these two email IDs are different.
- not when Google allowed people to sign up both ways. I signed up with a dot and have to login with it. If I try to login without the dot it won't let me. Why? Because someone else has the same name without the dots.
- You can't log in now without the dot in your username because the user name does not change in the database - it is what it is and it is bound forever to your account and your account's password.The FAQ answer on Google, cited several times in the comments on this post, confirm this to be true.Any cases of receiving someone's mail is likely because the other individual has used a variation of the GMail user's address as their 'reply-to' address in emails they have sent in the past. Why they would do this, I don't know, but my money is on carelessness and lack of foresight - the two causes of most SNAFUs on the web.
- I knew about this already. Seriously.
- Good for you, buddy. :-)
- This is not a good idea because it teaches our 'girlfriends' how to use email Gmail's way. Now people are going to start thinking that you can put [email protected].
- This tip has been recirculated at least five times in the last three years of my time scanning the del.icio.us/popular links .. try something new will you.
- I haven't tried this one yet..I will sign up for an account and see if it works..^^..thanks for sharing it aibek..^^
- Enjoy ;-)
- Are you sure that someone can't just register [email protected] when you have [email protected] and get email to that address?
- Yes, I am sure.
- Aibek - you are wrong. I have a [email protected] acct and someone else has [email protected]. I rec'v his emails. Definitely can happen - I have someone else's emails to prove it!
- It's weird. Check this out
- the same thing happens to me a couple times a week, there are two of us (at least) with the same address the period being the only difference
- I never heard this before.Honestly it is troublesome to use different variation of gmail address. Anyway you are awesome!
- bummer if you got [email protected] and not [email protected]. speaking from experience, yourname does not go to your.name, but i'm not sure if yourname gets mail from your.name.i hope not. for reals.
- It works in both cases. In Gmail's eyes your.name yourname.
- NOT TRUE.***WARNING***Be very careful using this trick. When I first signed up for gmail, the account (for example) [email protected] was taken. I signed up for and was then given [email protected].For a while, I was regularly receiving email intended for [email protected], probably due do his using this same trick.Sooner or later, someone WILL take your account name but with a period somewhere in the middle. You'll suddenly stop getting emails from your contacts with that address.
- Just so you know, the plus operator works with pretty much *any* email system, not just gmail.
- The only problem is that since this scheme is all in interpreting the email address, spammers harvesting email or site owners collecting your email can easily strip out the additional text just as gmail does. Spammers are known for adapting quickly :)The only real way to do this is to use your own domain and have all the email address for it forward to your real address, and use the [email protected] as the email you give to an individual site.
- In an adapted form, I've used your method for several years now. For every site where I need to register to make use of their services, I create a new address in the form of theirsitename@my.(sub.)domain. And from that domain everything is forwarded to my gmail address to take advantage of the spam- and mail-filtering options. Works miracles.
- Nice find. Thanks for sharing. ;-)
- You can use http://www.e4ward.com . You sign up for a username and for each website you create an email just for it, in the form [email protected].It's quite a good idea, all it's missing is a firefox extension to automatically generate the emails.
- forgot to close the tag. The site is http://www.e4ward.com
- CJB.net offers the same kind of service, if anyone is looking for more options :)
- Thanks for the links, however my favorite one is Mintemail. You can read about it below
- In the interests of good taste you should use a sample email address such asinstead of that vulgar name you actually cited.
- I didn't vote for him, but at least 25% of Americans did. So, I am just being 'correct' here. ;-)
- p.s. Luminus--assuming that you asked because you have gmail for domains, and could have tested this in about .088321 seconds instead of asking a blog comment, i'll answer the mystery for you:yes.
- the + thing... you didn't know that? rtfm doggy dogg.
- Cool stuff. Does this work with Google for your domain emails?
- I am not really sure what you mean. Are you referring to self hosted Gmail (like in Google Apps)? If so, I think it will work. I mean, it's the same email program but just on a different server.
- Here's the scenario that makes this worthless1. Sign up for new cool site w/ [email protected]2. Allow time to go by, stop using new cool site3. Attempt to log back, get forgotten password, cancel membership, etc for new cool site ... having forgotten what 'somethingwitty' was ...You now have no clue what your own email address is ... because the site isn't smart enough to know that [email protected] [email protected]And if they were smart enough to know that ... then the whole thing would be a complete waste anyway
- Good point.
- Lucky you kept the signup e-mail in your gmail archives then. Even smarter of you to have it stored wisely in a label called 'Account' or similar. But best of all: it was spectacular of you to notice that the original author pretty clearly states to use the site's domain name as an obvious extra in your e-mail address.Oh look, I just wrote something witty!
- However ... your Gmail inbox is big enough never to delete anything (at least it is for me) so you really wouldn't have to remember +somethingwitty, you just have to remember 'new cool site' and search for 'new cool site' in your Gmail inbox ...
- If you have at least 1 email from that new cool website, in that email, the 'to' address field contains your '[email protected]' gmail address. So you'll not forget ur email for that site.
- You'd be hard-pressed to find a password-recovery system that does not send the recovery information to the original email address.This is a non-issue, especially when set next to the problems associated with the current frequency of having several email addresses that are literally separate (ex: ISP-domain.com, Yahoo.com, Hotmail/msn/live.com, Gmail.com, etc.)
At least with Gmail, the user merely needs to run a filter to find emails sent to a form of the address that had a '.' out of place or a '+' tacked on.
- undefined functionality like that might change without notice, so the people who had the bogus email IDs might not be able to contact you in the future.
- There is nothing wrong with such usage. After all, all those deviations forwarded to only one mailbox. Making it unusable may result in serious consequences for millions of service users (Gmail subscribers), so it's highly unlikely.
- I just wet my pants thanks to the sheer numbing awesomeness of this piece of trivia. I've been waiting all my life for such a momentous event, as have the limbless Iraqis and malnourished children everywhere. The rapture is truly at hand.
- :-)
- It's nice to see that you're spending your time participating in this post and ridiculing everyone else for it instead of doing something noble.
- you can use #1 in google's webmail if you add a new account with this 'user.na.me':Setting - Account - Add Another Mail Account (enter the 'fake' em.a.il and then use your regular username)
- Mailinator FTW !
- Awesome
- Smart. Thanks.
- Nice tips. I've knew some of these...
- I've had several gmail accounts for about 3 years now and never knew that! Never had any problems with gmail, either. Great tip, I've always used filters, but this is definitely an innovative way.
- @pete:
I'm not sure where you get your poop from but it would be nice if you could provide a reference to it. I've just had a look through the Terms of Use and the Privacy Policy for Gmail and neither have any reference to anything happening after two years. In fact, as far as your data is concerned, the Terms of Use states: (Section 5, last paragraph)Google does not claim any ownership in any of the content, including any text, data, information, images, photographs, music, sound, video, or other material, that you upload, transmit or store in your Gmail account. We will not use any of your content for any purpose except to provide you with the Service. - nice find
- just a shame that your g-mails become public domain after 2 yrs - read the license morons! no matter how many fancy features they put on ur account the fact remains that it's not secure and that g-mail is a load of poop (put mildly)
- Totally agree with Dave, some references would be nice.
- Could you point this moron to the section in the terms of service that states that my gmail goes into the public domain after 2 years? No? I didn't think so - it doesn't exist.
- this is old news, like a few years
- yeah, and still many people didn't know it.
- Then it wasn't meant for you to waste your time reading.
It was for the people who didn't know about it. Duh.
- Going to go try it out. Didn't know any of these features. Hey I knew it sent mail the old fashion way, never took the time to check out the rest.
- i knew this
- This is almost a duplicate of this story:
- @ MarkIt seems that the filtering using dots in the email address will work only if you're using desktop email client (Mozilla ThunderBird, Microsoft Outlook, etc.).Thanks for correction ;-)
- sorta old news, note that many places won't accept a + character because it's not considered valid - some e-mail clients may even trash incoming emails because it sees this as something hostile, e-mail addresses were formerly restricted to only alphanumeric characters and originally could not start with a number - but over time this has changed, but we're still finicky over it.
- @ BrianI agree most of the bigger and popular ones won't allow it, but smaller ones usually overlook this.
- Hmmm... sounds strange, number one definitely works for me. Maybe different programs/clients handle filters differently. I use Thunderbird 2.0 and it definitely works for me. My filters are up and running. ;-).
What client/program are you using ? - A lot of websites don't allow you to enter an email address that includes a + symbol.
- That's akin to emailing an ISP and telling them that a host on their network is spamming. They won't do anything about it, because it's not affecting them. Because most of the 'validators' for email online don't support anything more than the absolute minimum, many times, my email dp [at] dp [dot] cx is considered invalid. I'm told that I need a 3 character username, and a 3 character TLD....
- Validating email is easy. you can use client side scripting or even server side scripting.It's just about the sites policy I think.Some sites (webmasters) has been clever enough to know that gmail allow as to use + after our mail address as a kind of fake email. and they just don't want people to register into their site with a fake address.That's why many website won't allow you to register with email that has + on the address.imw, thanks
- @ JackBook
While the sentiment about fake email addresses is valid, it's a non-sequitur to assume that it's the source of bad validation. Using a '+' in email addresses is not uncommon, nor unique to gmail. Gmail has merely implemented it as a form of sub-address, which is far from fake addresses (10 Minute Mail anyone?).Any developer whose validation eliminates use of '+' in email addresses is either ignorant to the fact that it's a valid character, or paranoid about visitors who ignore the bulk emails (usually worthless 'notices' and/or unsolicited newsletters) they send out.
- Go create a gmail account with $ ' or ! in the address, those are valid too.Go look at email validation code, most want just A-z and 0-9, and periods.
- Good One !!!
- Not impressed.
- yeah, knew this for a long time ago,
but still makeuseof.com has a really good style to tell this story to their readers.
i love their entertaining writing.
that is something taht i have to learn.
thanks- I have known this for a good long time. Another great feature is that you can add +anything to the end of your gmail. For example:This isn't allowed by all website's forms however, some flag a + as an invalid character.
- Then show us something mr badass.Remarks like yours is a typical sign of mr knowitall.Know the type.
- I don't really see how this is orignal. I mean it is and everything its just kinda weird. And who cares.