Right now I'm using Yahoo Mail. It's absolutely terrible and I regret my life choices. Gmail is the natural alternative, but I'm a little uncomfortable with Google's track record of surveillance. I'd like my emails to actually be private. I know there are various privacy-focused services, but I also value good UIs, feature richness, and overall ease of use. I'm guessing many of them are worse at this than Gmail, though I haven't checked yet. I also don't want to pick a service that's going to stop existing or change significantly a few years down the line; transferring everything over is going to be a pain and I don't want to have to do it twice.
If I end up using a mix of multiple services, such as having an address at one domain but using a different client to view my inbox, I'll resolve to 50% each.
Aug 17, 9:47am: Oh, I forgot to mention: I also don't want it to require 2FA. I don't have a consistent mobile phone number, so 2FA is extremely frustrating and tends to result in me getting locked out of my accounts.
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@IsaacKing The only thing I would note here is the importance of being able to communicate it clearly in-person or over the phone. is@ac-ki.ng may be easy to type, but I've found that longer emails with whole words are easier to communicate. Something like isaacking.org or isaacking.email would give you a legible primary domain and plenty of subdomains/addresses to pay with.
@IsaacKing If you're on the paid version, you can also use a catch-all address. I've found this super helpful for isolating/quarantining spam, or just having multiple accounts per site. Just sign up for facebook with facebook@isaacking.email and if facebook gets hacked and leaks your email, just set up a protonmail filter to send anything from that address directly to spam. It's a lot more robust than something like isaac+facebook@gmail.com (though proton can do that too!)
@IsaacKing https://www.hey.com/features/ lists the features hey has; there's not much point in me diving into each of them. That said, the overall point in my opinion isn't the specific features, though some are quite useful. It's that Hey has a somewhat opinionated view on how best to interact with email, which is what allows them to build a better-than-normal email client. Rather than being everything for everyone, Hey focuses on making a smooth experience for those willing to adopt its way of thinking about email.
For anyone who already has strong opinions about how to manage email, Hey might not be the best fit. But if your email is a bit of a mess, and you want an opinionated framework for working with email, that's when I'd say Hey is worth it. But it's definitely not for everyone.
The other big advantage of Hey is that insofar as you're paying for it you're the customer, and I feel like I can trust that far more than I can something free. If, heaven forbid, something happens to my Google account, I know I'd been in for a heck of a time navigating the byzantine hellscape of Google's support channels. Hey has very good customer support, with actual people answering you quickly and helpfully.
They're not the only ones with good customer support, of course, but I'm pretty sure that you'll only be able to find that level of support for a product you're paying for. Email is a pretty darn important part of your digital life, so all in all I'd prefer to be paying for it. That not exclusively a reason to use Hey, but that is a reason to not just default to a free service.
"The only people that can read your emails are you and Google — that's because Superhuman operates on top of Gmail accounts."
https://blog.superhuman.com/superhuman-soc-2-compliant-data-privacy
Also doesn't support custom domain names even on the paid plan. Seems almost strictly worse than Gmail for my purposes unfortunately.
I bidded this up because I think that it the "rational", superior option, on account of its better privacy, which the OP claims to value. Going line by line:
> I'd like my emails to actually be private.
Tick. They get you because normally your counterparty uses something like gmail, but Protonmail does well on your side. But if you're doing something illegal in your jurisdiction, maybe use XMPP (<https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/XMPP>) instead.
> I know there are various privacy-focused services, but I also value good UIs, feature richness, and overall ease of use.
> I'm guessing many of them are worse at this than Gmail, though I haven't checked yet.
Protonmail has good UI, is relatively feature rich, and most importantly, I'd expect to improve on this in the future. Say maybe 90% of the polish of gmail
> I also don't want to pick a service that's going to stop existing or change significantly a few years down the line; transferring everything over is going to be a pain and I don't want to have to do it twice.
Not a concern for Protonmail.
@stone for example:
ac-king.com or c-king.com, so your adres can be: isa@c-king.com or maybe there's a .ng top level domain, New Guinea maybe?
Then you could buy:
Additionally, importing from gmail is easy. Did it a few months ago, & don't regret it.
@wasabipesto They have a much better track record of privacy than most other services, plus the ability to bring your own domain. The UI is pretty nice, plus it has its own calendar and drive alternate.