Does the creative commons licence at the end of every comment really do anything? Are you going to do anything about it if someone doesn’t respect the permissions you’ve laid out?
To add onto what Andromxda said, SimpleLogin is included with your Proton account (might be paid accounts only).
Use it with a custom domain - it’s amazing and if Proton Mail ever shuts down you won’t have to migrate any of your logins because they’re already on your own domain.
SimpleLogin has a free tier, which is limited to 15 aliases. But if you have a paid Proton subscription, you can connect your SimpleLogin account and you get the premium version.
I use both. Proton pass is good because you can create, free of charge, up to 10 aliases for your proton mail account.
CC BY-NC-SA 4.0
Does the creative commons licence at the end of every comment really do anything? Are you going to do anything about it if someone doesn’t respect the permissions you’ve laid out?
No, but I hope that someday an IA spell the license for me to have a good laugh.
CC BY-NC-SA 4.0
I would appreciate it if you’d stop adding it.
Why?
CC BY-NC-SA 4.0
On mobile it is the most visible object on the screen, and very annoying:
To add onto what Andromxda said, SimpleLogin is included with your Proton account (might be paid accounts only).
Use it with a custom domain - it’s amazing and if Proton Mail ever shuts down you won’t have to migrate any of your logins because they’re already on your own domain.
Nice, I will try that
CC BY-NC-SA 4.0
SimpleLogin has a free tier, which is limited to 15 aliases. But if you have a paid Proton subscription, you can connect your SimpleLogin account and you get the premium version.
What does Proton Pass have to do with Proton Mail that it can add 10 free mail aliases?