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Joined 2 天前
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Cake day: 2026年5月19日

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  • Migrating 20+ year inboxes are definitely a pain. I did it a while ago, and tried to stay on top of it better since. As said below, never fully delete an old-email address. Others might be able to hijack the old account and impersonate you. Use a custom domain so you can easily switch providers if ever needed. A catch-all or aliases work great, but check if it allows to send from it. Especially for verification (e.g. delete an account) you often need to verify or send from the origin email. I stopped unique addresses per website. I’d keep a few just to separate “official” things, from general use/registration, and stuff I don’t trust.

    Paperweight sort of gives you an overview of services, but I’d recommend to do this more gradually otherwise you’d probably go crazy. Whenever you sign up, check your email and change to one of the addresses above. After a year or so, you likely have done most important once (that at least require you to login). You could probably just keep the others as is, with your old email for legacy. But only use the new address(es) moving forward.

    Hope that helps!









  • Sure, like most projects I use AI assistance a lot for most of my work these days, ngl. Its helps me plan, research and code new ideas/features and makes a lot of my work easier. Having said that, I fully understand and share people’s feelings about yolo, vibe-coded slop. I’ve been a software engineer for 20+ years. AI helps with a lot, but also feels like the honeymoon phase is wearing off actually. It doesn’t give me the joy of building stuff. I still test, review and ship everything myself. You can check my Github history that I’ve been doing this way before recent AI hype.

    Either way, the idea and execution is 100% me. I’m building something I want, use, and care about myself. Whether I’ve used AI is not too relevant, imo. It’s that all alternatives have been caught selling your data (Unroll), heavily rely their centralized services or require you to give up your data in order to remove it. Which is ironic. Paperweight is the only tool I’m aware of that does this entirely local and is open-source.

    P.S if its quality you’re worried about, Paperweight has been audited through Google’s CASA assessment and Apple’s developer verification (admittedly, not a super high bar).