Have a look at purelymail mentioned by others. It’s almost exactly what I’m looking for.
Have a look at purelymail mentioned by others. It’s almost exactly what I’m looking for.
Exactly what I’m looking for. Thanks a lot!
Pretty nice but way more expensive then simplymail
Amazing! Now this is something I haven’t heard of. I think we might have a winner here! Best thing, I could use it for transactional mail on all my websites for 10€/yr. Including as many inboxes as needed. Nice!
This is something you used to be able to do for free, no problem. It’s only a few of the big mail accepting companies being extra shitty about accepting mail making this tough. Looking at you Microsoft. So a few hundred mails per month is ridiculous both on storage, bandwidth and CPU consumption.
I specifically want to not deal with deliverability beyond the content and volume of my mails.
Yeah, sorry it’s not a precise term. I mean a non asshole company.
Thanks but that’s not what I’m looking for. I need to send mails only.
Mostly that they respect the privacy of my users and that they don’t have shady business practices that want to push you towards an over-expensive paid tier.
What should notifications be like instead?
Rocket.chat could be an option
Yeah, very nice. It will be tough to bootstrap since you need a critical mass of people who ideally live close together so that it’s cheap and quick enough to deliver the items in question.
I’ll give it a try. Nothing to loose.
Not true about xmpp in general. There are modern clients out there.
What’s your problem with xmpp?
I totally agree about rate limiting, mostly against bad passwords that you are not in control of. But banning failed attempts is mostly not interesting if you ask me. It feels like the right thing to do, but IP addresses can change and other measures are better.
It’s debated whether software like fail2ban actually helps or if it just makes attacks visible that would anyways fail if you have up to date software. Oftentimes, defensive software adds attack-surface because it adds more software that can be targeted by attackers.
Fail2ban might help with protecting against exploiting of bad passwords though.
Same for me
That’s actually a good point. Will need to think about server location and GDPR compliance.