Thank you for the great service you provide.
Is it possible to create a spamgourmet email address and be the one to initiate the email conversation, while all the while using the spamgourmet address and not having my "real email address" (e.g., gmail) hidden?
I like how, after I create a new spamgourmet email address, say schoolfriends.joesmith@xoxy.net, and put it on a web form, the email address to which my xoxy/spamgourmet email is forwarded to can just hit "reply" to the person while keeping my "real email address" hidden.
1. Go to spamgourmet.com
2. create schoolfriends.joesmith as an alias
3. Put schoolfriends.joesmith@spamgourmet.com in the online form of some XYZ website.
4. XYZ website owner sends email to schoolfriends.joesmith@spamgourmet.com.
5. My "real email address" (e.g. joesmith@gmail.com) receives the email from sueclark@xyzwebsite.com
6. The "from" email address is something like +schoolfriends+joesmith+8d3eb2971e.suec ... ourmet.com
7. When I hit the "reply" button, the email is then to sueclark@xyzwebsite.com, but through
+schoolfriends+joesmith+8d3eb2971e.suec ... ourmet.com
8. Sue Clark receives an email from me, but from her point of view, the email still comes from schoolfriends.joesmith@spamgourmet.com, even though my real from email address is more like joesmith@gmail.com.
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In order for Steps 1-8 to occur smoothly, I, the spamgourmet user, must wait to receive the first email. But what if I must be the one to send the first email? What if xyzwebsite.com does not have an online form, but rather it has just an email address? How can I send the first email address if I don't know what sort of code to use? In other words, if I had to send an email to fisherman@wharf.com without letting him know of my real email address, how should I formulate the "to" email address?
Look below:
+schoolfriends+joesmith+8d3eb2971e.sueclark#xyzwebsite.com@spamgourmet.com
What letters and numbers do I put it bold and red-texted portion above? Or is there an easier way???
Thank you.