Tired of multiple “fake” email addresses?

Honestly, how many fake, forgotten, or abandoned email addresses have owned within your internet era? Whether for registering to a forum you only need once, selling an item on craigslist, signing up for a trial software or registering to an online dating service your wife should never find out about, we’ve all had to use our creative mind to come up with new, randomized email addresses that look more like a ciphering code than an actual word or name (bs77flat01@hotmail.com).

No need for that anymore, thanks to – you guessed right – Google!

Gmail supports sub-addressing (RFC5233) of emails. Messages can be sent to addresses in the format username+extratext@gmail.com, where extratext can be any string, and will arrive in the inbox of username@gmail.com.

Gmail also does not recognize dots as characters within a username. Instead, it will ignore all dots in a username. For instance, the account google@gmail.com receives mail sent to goo.gle@gmail.com, g.o.o.g.l.e@gmail.com, etc. This allows users to sign up for different services with different aliases and then easily filter, delete, apply a label or create a rule from all emails from those services. In addition, should users start to receive spam messages that are directed to their email address with the extra text or dots, they will know what services have leaked out their email address to others.