💾 Archived View for danq.me › posts › shared-email-addresses captured on 2024-08-18 at 18:30:48. Gemini links have been rewritten to link to archived content
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2024-07-29
There are two particular varieties of email address that I don't often see, but I've been known to ridicule when I have:
(The most ill-conceived example of geographically-based email addresses I've ever seen came from a a 2003 proposal by then-MP Derek Wyatt, who proposed that the domain name part of every single email address should contain not only the country of the owner (e.g. .uk) but also their complete postcode. He was under the delusion that this would somehow prevent spam. Even ignoring the immense technical challenges of his proposal and the impossibility of policing it across the borders of every country that uses email... it probably wouldn't even be effective at his stated goal. I'll let The Register take it from here.)
Archive.org's copy of Wyatt's 2003 proposal
If you've come across either of the above before, there's... perhaps a reasonable chance that it was in the possession of somebody born before 1960 (and the older, the more-likely) (No ageism intended: I suspect that the phenomenon actually stems from the fact that as email took off in the noughties this demographic who were significantly more-likely than younger folks to have (a) a very long-term home that they didn't anticipate moving out of any time soon, and (b) an existing anticipation that people and companies wrote to them as a couple, not individually.).
I found myself thinking about this as I clicked the "No" button on a poll by Terence Eden that asked whether I used a "shared" email address when in a stable long-term relationship.
Terence Eden's poll, on Mastodon
It wasn't until after I clicked "No" that I realised that, in actual fact, I have had multiple email addresses that I've share with significant other(s). And more than that, sometimes they've been geographically-based! What's going on?
I've routinely had domains or subdomains that I've used to represent a place that I live. They're convenient for when you want to give somebody a short web address which'll take them to a page with directions to you and links to your location in a variety of different services and formats.
And by that point, you might as well have an email alias, e.g. all@myhouse.example.org, that forwards on email to, well, all the adults at the house. What I've described there is, after a fashion, a shared email address tied to a geographical location. But we don't ever send anything from it. Nor do we use it for any kind of personal communication with anybody outside the house.
We don't give out these all@ addresses (or their aliases: every company gets their own) to people willy-nilly. But they're useful for shared services that send automated emails to us all. For example:
Sure, the need for most of these solutions would evaporate instantly if more services supported multi-user or delegated access.
I'd love it if the grocery delivery sites would let multiple "accounts", by mutual consent, share a delivery slot, destination, and payment method. It'd be cool to know that we could e.g. have a houseguest and give them temporary access to a specific order that was scheduled for during their stay. But that's probably a lot of work for very little payoff if you're busy running a supermarket.
But outside of that fantasy world, shared aliases seem to be pretty useful!