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YSK: you can buy (email) accounts anonymously using darknet markets


This entry was edited (3 days ago)
in reply to hirihit640

Man, if you really think some darknet service is going to be more reliable just because Protonmail wants a specific kind of fiat
in reply to ianhclark510

what do you mean? Are you talking about how you can pay for Protonmail using cash? I haven't found a way to anonymously send cash. Physical movement can be easily tracked via surveillance cameras
in reply to hirihit640

Exactly, do you really think that your data is magically more secure because you paid the vendor with bits farmed on an ASIC somewhere instead of dead slave owner portraits?
in reply to ianhclark510

yes, I believe that Tor and Monero are more private/secure than the postal service, just like I believe that 2048-bit RSA is more secure than a padlock
This entry was edited (3 days ago)
in reply to hirihit640

Nobody mentioned the postal service? You’re either hallucinating AI slop or a deluded zoomer regurgitating AI slop, and therefore you can go fuck yourself sideways
in reply to ianhclark510

you're going to have to explain what you meant by dead slave owner portraits. I assumed you meant dollar bills, but if you want to pay Protonmail using cash you need to mail it over, hence the postal service
in reply to hirihit640

That is indeed a currency with a picture of a dead slave owner on it, got it in one

I could easily sign up for a protonmail account without mailing anything, that sounds like such sovereign citizen bullcrap I can’t type it out with a straight face XD

in reply to ianhclark510

the point of the post is about creating accounts anonymously. Try creating a protonmail account using a VPN or Tor, without giving any PII.

You were the one that brought up cash, I was simply explaining that sending Monero is often more private than sending cash

This entry was edited (3 days ago)
in reply to hirihit640

…..Creating accounts anonymously by using Crytocurrency

Which you purport to be more reliable

More reliable than what exactly?

in reply to ianhclark510

than other anonymous methods, like trying to find the right Tor exit for Tutanota to let you create an account, or trying to use sms services like smspool to get past the phone number check from Protonmail, etc. These methods only work like 25% of the time, while buying accounts from the darknet has worked for me 100% of the time.
in reply to ianhclark510

Monero is very secure. You might want to actually read about it first... For one, it runs best on consumer grade hardware
This entry was edited (3 days ago)
in reply to prole

Cool, so running on consumer hardware makes your communications more secure how exactly?
in reply to ianhclark510

it makes it more decentralized, preventing data centers from having a large advantage and mounting 51% attacks
in reply to hirihit640

Ahh yes, I’m sure some genius out there is scheming a 51% attack on the Federal Reserve 🙄

We need a more decentralized digital currency to address the issues inherent to the last decentralized digital currency!

in reply to ianhclark510

Ok this is getting far off topic. Monero provides privacy. It's a lot easier to send money anonymously using Monero than, say, cash or credit. The point that the other commenter made about consumer hardware, is more about decentralization, which some people value and are thus against government-controlled currency like the Federal Reserve. But that's not why I brought up Monero in the post
This entry was edited (3 days ago)
in reply to hirihit640

You can say that again lmao, it was an honor getting lost in the sauce with you o7
in reply to ianhclark510

I brought up the hardware thing because people don't use ASICs for it as far as I understand. Which is what you said.

The zero-knowledge proofs and ring signatures make it secure.

But hey man, if you think you can crack it, there's millions of dollars there waiting for you so go for it.

This entry was edited (2 days ago)
in reply to prole

Okay, cool, completely aside the point

Say I spent the next 5 years developing StuperDuperMonero with -1-knowledge proofs and purple starfish signatures

Would you purport that this would somehow make your communications more secure?

in reply to ianhclark510

It's amazing how in such few words you have shown how you know utterly nothing about Monero
This entry was edited (3 days ago)
in reply to hirihit640

Physical movement can be tracked by cameras. All digital transactions are tracked by virtue of the way the internet works.

When you put your trust in digital transactions you are putting your trust in the cryptography that hopefully underpins them. With recent regimes of harvest now decrypt later, you are putting your trust in both the perfect forward and quantum/parallel resistance of that cryptography.

Just some food for thought. Sending cash might be a smarter choice than you think.

in reply to whatiswrongwithyou

harvest now decrypt later applies to cameras too. Install a bunch of security cameras, aggregate all footage, use facial detection, gait detection, predictive algorithms, etc to figure out the motion of all citizens at all times. I would not be surprised if governments were already doing this.

You simply cannot practically "encrypt" physical methods wirh the same amount of entropy that can be used for digital methods. And this is even before quantum-safe encryption.

This entry was edited (3 days ago)
in reply to hirihit640

Hndl applied to physical surveillance is all metadata. Hndl for digital interactions is content too.
in reply to whatiswrongwithyou

that's assuming they don't scan the contents of mail, in which case physical surveillance would include content too.
in reply to hirihit640

Physical surveillance of mail is incredibly expensive, slow and subject to a bunch of regulations.

It also doesn’t consistently work.

Electronic surveillance of communications is incredibly cheap in comparison, near instantaneous and an evolving new technology that’s loosely regulated if at all.

It also creates a 1:1 copy of the transmission for interpretation at a later date.

in reply to whatiswrongwithyou

Regulation means nothing, if the feds want to track people there's endless strings they can pull. Plenty of evidence online of feds intercepting packages and bugging devices. They can even use illegal means and then use parallel construction.

On the other hand, just because the feds collect a bunch of dsta to be decrypted later, doesn't mean they actually will. Encryption is very rarely cracked, it's far more difficult than tracking people down via camera footage. Not to mention, statute of limitations means that even if they crack it 20 years later, the data might be useless by then.

Fact is, I can send some monero to somebody today and know it won't be cracked within the year. But if I put on a mask and gloves and try to send a letter in the dead of the night, I know there's still a chance that I'm caught.

There's a reason why hackers today choose to use crypto and mixers rather than cash. Same reason why the US criminalized tornado wallet. Turns out, Monero and mixers are incredibly effective.

in reply to hirihit640

Physical surveillance is barely even circumstantial evidence of the crimes we’re talking about, Hndl troves are incontrovertible. People get caught using monero to do crimes all the time.

Of course if you dress up like the hamburgler you’re gonna stick out. Just look normal.

I did not intend to fight you about this, the point of my reply was to provide some context about the often overlooked physical side of things.

We very often overlook the physical because we think it’s too unknown and that we understand the digital much better but in many years I’ve never met a person who thought that way and could explain in detail how the web works or why certificates are scrubbed.

Keep your nose clean out there, you never know whose gonna be looking in 20 years…

in reply to whatiswrongwithyou

in reply to hirihit640

in reply to whatiswrongwithyou

What do you mean the space for digital is unlimited and infinite? There's finite resources on the planet. 2048-bit RSA is not getting brute-forced in our lifetime (without quantum). And if you are talking about password strength, all of what you mentioned should be factored in. Take the combined compute of all GPUs of the world, factor in Moore's law with a 50 year horizon, and figure out how strong your password should be. I know some people use 128 bits of entropy but I think 100 bits is plenty. Use a word-based passphrase for easy memorization. Or just use a hardware key.

Now I'd love to know how to calculate what level of security is enough for physical methods. Anything rigorous?

in reply to hirihit640

in reply to whatiswrongwithyou

in reply to hirihit640

in reply to whatiswrongwithyou

in reply to hirihit640

this legit feels illegal/criminal. aren't those accounts stolen or made through identity theft?
in reply to hexagonwin

Not necessarily. Protonmail will happily let you create an account if you don't use a VPN or Tor. Such accounts are tied to your IP, so you can't create too many of them, which is all Protonmail cares about, since spam accounts reduce the trustworthiness of their email service. I really doubt sellers are going through efforts to steal accounts, if they can just make them for free at a coffee shop.

Darknet markets create a system where people can create accounts non-anonymously, and convert them into anonymous accounts by selling them to others. I wish this were more common. For example I'd love to be able to pay for an anonymous Youtube Premium account

Edit: also in case it reassures anybody, the accounts I got from the darknet were clearly freshly made accounts, not stolen. Only a few days old, and no emails except the "welcome to protonmail" one.

This entry was edited (3 days ago)
in reply to hirihit640

people can create accounts non-anonymously, and convert them into anonymous accounts by selling them to others


yes so that's the part where identity theft is used

in reply to hexagonwin

is that legally identity theft? Creating accounts and then transferring them to others? I'm sure it violates ToS but I wasn't aware that it was illegal
in reply to hirihit640

Yeah the word “theft” usually connotes harm via taking away the possession of another. Identity sale or even light identity “fraud” if you’re being pedantic, but hardly theft if the originator of the account is knowingly transferring it away from themselves, especially for monetary gain.
in reply to hirihit640

that's not what i'm talking about. i mean, the one who sold you the account is very likely not the one who provided the personal information to create the account. it's very hard to create those online accounts at scale with few people's personal information, so identity theft is widely utilized to mitigate that.
in reply to hexagonwin

I think you overestimate the scale. Last I checked there were only like 3-4 sellers. They could easily be making these accounts themselves. If the scale grew larger, people in poorer countries would see it as a way to make a quick buck, and start selling them as well. And if the scale grew to an enormous size, Protonmail would probably just start accepting crypto instead of just letting darknet sellers make all the money.
in reply to hirihit640

i've seen far more. maybe there's not many on the specific forum/website you're looking at, but there are many criminals on dark web forums selling directly stolen accounts or accounts generated with stolen PIIs. in this case it is definitely illegal/criminal, and this post may be seen as endorsing such cases.
in reply to hexagonwin

interesting, I have not seen that before but if it helps, no I don't endorse stealing accounts or buying stolen accounts. Given how easy it is to make a (non-anonymous) Protonmail account I'm inclined to believe that most accounts sold are legitimate, but one should always practice best judgement when browsing the darknet
in reply to hirihit640

It varies by jurisdiction but if the reseller you bought from is selling you an account used by some other person for some personally identifiable thing (which is why the internet at large trusts that account and why you bought it!) then you’re at the very least toeing the line of Id theft or impersonation and while the cops might not be able to get you for that particular crime they will absolutely have enough suspicion to investigate you and discover other crimes or even just watchlist you.

I don’t care if you break the law from a moral or ethical standpoint, but it can cause you problems from a practical one.

in reply to whatiswrongwithyou

used by some other person for some personally identifiable thing (which is why the internet at large trusts that account and why you bought it!)


the internet trusts protonmail because protonmail adds barriers to prevent unlimited spam accounts from being created. Those barriers are IP, phone number, and secondary email. Darknet markets simply provide an alternative path: monetary. But monetary is still a barrier, and prevents spam accounts as well. So imo society should still "trust" it. In other words, a monetary barrier achieves sybil resistance without sacrificing privacy, and I'm all in support of that.

in reply to hirihit640

You are not following the point I’m making:

The account you buy on the darknet works because the rest of the internet already associated it with an identity. That means law enforcement has cause to investigate the new user for impersonation or id theft. It doesn’t matter if they can’t get you for id theft or impersonation on a technicality, they’re already investigating you at that point! Law enforcement attention is what you don’t want!

It’s like using your neighbors car with an expired tag because you don’t want to have your car show up on the highway cameras.

in reply to whatiswrongwithyou

with dragnet surveillance, law enforcement is already investigating everybody. The purpose of buying it on the darknet is that it's anonymous, so it doesn't matter if law enforcement investigates it.
in reply to hirihit640

It’s anonymous at the moment you buy it. After that you use it and identifying data and metadata that conflicts with the original users data and metadata starts to accumulate.
in reply to whatiswrongwithyou

I'm confused at your point here. First off, there's very little initial metadata. The seller uses their ip address to make the account, and then you buy the account and start using Tor to access the account. From Protonmail's perspective, this just looks like somebody made an account and started using it with Tor.

But let's say there was some usage difference that could be detected. Maybe the seller used the email for Github, and then you started using it for Discord. So what? I think you're going to have to be more specific about the threat here.

This entry was edited (3 days ago)
in reply to hirihit640

The threat is that someone who learns the material facts of your accounts interactions around the internet would (correctly) recognize that it changed hands and if that person were some kind of cop they would have cause to investigate further, possibly uncovering other facts about you or your activities.

The point is that you’re breaking one of the cardinal rules: “keep your head down and your nose clean!”

Not gonna fight about it, just making it known.

in reply to whatiswrongwithyou

In the case of buying Protonmail accounts, I don't think it's obvious that it changed hands, since again, it just looks like the account user started using Tor, nothing more. The use of Tor is suspicious, but so is any anonymous methods. For example, mailing cash to a email provider is also extremely suspicious, given how much effort one is going through to pay anonymously, and thus it may trigger a cop to immediately start reviewing security camera footage around the mailbox. Any type of anonymity is going to raise eyebrows, but buying accounts from the darknet is imo the safest and most secure method.

But being aware of the tradeoffs is important so thanks for sharing

This entry was edited (2 days ago)
in reply to hirihit640

We accept that there is a surveillance panopticon that operates on all our actions online. We accept that it collects information that can be compiled to form a frighteningly accurate picture of us as individuals. We accept that the internet as a whole uses the presence of this information to prevent anonymity, ostensibly to stop spammers and scammers.

But it wouldn’t be obvious an account changed hands.

in reply to whatiswrongwithyou

yes, in this case it wouldn't be obvious. Unless you can figure out a clear way to distinguish between a person who made an account and then started using it with Tor, vs somebody who made an account, sold it on the darknet, and the buyer started using it with Tor
in reply to hexagonwin

either you didn't get the idea, or you don't know what's identity theft
in reply to hexagonwin

So, I undetood what you were saying. It's weird how few others did. You have no way of knowing whether these were created by the person selling them (doubtful) or they used someone else's identity without their permission.
in reply to ParlimentOfDoom

yeah this.. you can't know for sure the person selling you the account is the one who made the account, or the one who provided the personal information to create that account.

i highly doubt there are many people who even know where to sell their own created online accounts and monetize them. these accounts being sold at scale very likely seems like accounts that are literally stolen or created with stolen personal information.

of course, i'm not saying violating ToS is illegal or whatever bs. i hate those PII monetizing big tech as much as any other fediverse user.

in reply to ParlimentOfDoom

"using somebody else's identity" on it's own would not help here. To create a Protonmail account, you would either need a non-VPN IP, or access to a phone number or secondary email. You can't just plug in somebody else's name and address. The seller could try to hack other people's accounts, but in my mind it's much easier for them to create accounts legitimately using their own phone #, or at a coffee shop.
in reply to hirihit640

Not necessarily. Protonmail will happily let you create an account if you don't use a VPN or Tor. Such accounts are tied to your IP


Can't you just go somewhere that has public wifi and set up a Proton account from there? No VPN and they dont have your IP.

in reply to Coleslaw4145

Could work in some cases, though if the feds were trying to track you down they'd have approximate location + surveillance camera footage to work from. As I said in other comments, the posted method works for extreme threat profiles
in reply to hirihit640

Man just go to gmail and make an email address. I have like 30. I have addresses for spam, doing financial stuff, signing up for irl service requests (plumbing or electrician or whatever), etc etc. it takes like 5 mins to setup forwarding and filters, so you don’t miss something you care about
in reply to TropicalDingdong

It depends. Certain behaviour like creating multiple accounts in a short time span, or creating an account using Tor/VPN will trigger ProtonMail into making you verify with a phone number, a (non-ProtonMail) email address, or by paying them
in reply to Jimbabwe

The post is about creating accounts anonymously. I think you are talking about preventing the email recipient from knowing who you are. I am talking about preventing the email provider (Gmail, Protonmail) and the government (who can compel companies to track users) from knowing who you are.

This is an extreme threat model that takes a lot of effort, but one that some may find useful nonetheless

in reply to hirihit640

Can we just perfect strangers this and I create zendayagirl67@gmail and you create shielaandstu@hotmail, then we trade?

Am I being very naive?

in reply to idiomaddict

Interesting idea. Honestly at first glance I thought this seemed ok, but it's actually dangerous. Imagine if you initiated a trade with somebody and they turned out to be a fed. The fed now has the gmail account you created, and can just ask gmail who created the account. Now they have your identity, and they also know the hotmail account they gave you, so your identity is now linked to that email as well.

By definition, the only way to anonymously acquire an email account is to give zero identifying information about yourself, but by giving away an email account that you created non-anonymously, you are giving away identifying details.

This entry was edited (3 days ago)
in reply to hirihit640

Oh, yeah. That’s a very real possibility. I assume trading only with trusted online friends (obviously one might trust the wrong person, but plenty of people have 20+ year old friendships with people whom they’ve never met irl, and ) would compound the problem by making your online network even more traceable?
in reply to idiomaddict

That's another tricky question. I suppose it's possible to make an anonymous online connection, chat with them long enough to be confident that they aren't a fed, and then trade emails. Sounds like a lot of work though 😅

Some things to be cautious about though. If this is a friend that you made over non-anonymous channels, eg Facebook or Discord, then the feds may have already established a link between you two. I'm sure the feds create big social graphs that map the connections between everybody. So if you trade emails with a friend, and then do something illegal with that email, the feds go to your friend, realize that they have the wrong person, and even if your friend doesn't give up any info, the feds might investigate you anyways due to your connection to them.

in reply to hirihit640

Yeah, I think you’re right and it’s unlikely that many people have such long friendships with people over entirely private media.

If you’re enjoying the hypotheticals, I’ve got another, but if they’re unhelpful/distracting, don’t feel obligated to indulge me. What if you had an open, anonymous community sharing a chain of emails, so each person joining the group would receive the email account made by the person before them and would make an email for the person joining after them? Obviously the feds could still infiltrate it, but they’d have a lot less data from any given user and they’d get the most data from the person who joins after they do, which they can’t control. Unless they monitor it 24/7 and get lucky, they wouldn’t be able to make sure every other user is a fed. That seems like it would also be relatively easy to detect, if every single time a new account joined, another immediately followed.

in reply to idiomaddict

keep the hypotheticals coming! They're always fun to think about.

The problem with the chain sharing idea, is all it takes is one person to not make an email for the next person, and the chain is broken.

It sounds like you are trying to create a system for anonymously trading emails. Maybe you invent a fancy system where you have to give an email in order to receive one. But why stop there? What if somebody comes along and says "I'm not very good at making emails, but I can write songs. Can I trade a song for an email address?" And then somebody else says "Sure! Man it would be nice if there were some intermediate form of value that we could use to trade goods and services, instead of just trading emails directly". Voila, the invention of currency :). This is effectively what the darknet market is. A way to anonymously trade goods and services.

in reply to hirihit640

Yeah, I figured the prior person’s information would only be released when the new user provides the details for a valid email account. I’m (clearly) not a tech person, but that sounds relatively doable.

The problem with changing the terms is that you don’t know who’s going to join after you, so you don’t know that they want a song. You can look at that as the free market in action, but it’s also effectively a dead end for a purpose-built group.

It has also just occurred to me that people who want to commit fraud would also be interested in this, and perhaps giving them the opportunity to collect a bunch of potential blackmail ammunition is not ideal.

in reply to idiomaddict

in reply to hirihit640

Just get a Tuta account. No recovery email or phone number required. Sometimes they will kill a new account, just wait a day or two before using it or buy a voucher from Proxysrore with Monero and upgrade.
in reply to Scott 🇨🇦🏴‍☠️

Tuta will kill any new account that is used to register to another service. It's in their ToS and you get blocked immediately.
in reply to comrade_twisty

I used Tuta to create my Bluesky account and all my Addy traffic goes to Tuta although I did wait a while before using my Tuta.
This entry was edited (3 days ago)
in reply to Scott 🇨🇦🏴‍☠️

I have had spotty success with Tuta in the past. Out of the 5-10 times I tried, maybe 2-3 succeeded. And I had to wait 1-2 day before I could find out whether or not it succeeded, and if it failed I'd have no idea why. I just found the process way too annoying, and I'm willing to pay a few bucks to save myself the trouble. And, last I remember, the voucher can only be used to upgrade an account, but the problem is creating an account in the first place
in reply to Scott 🇨🇦🏴‍☠️

in reply to hirihit640

Can you elaborate on how to get get Monero and hide then transaction from BigData/Gov?

I've seen some of the basic steps but I imagine the Gov/Bank see me transfer money to a Monero.

They see that Monero account pay for ServiceX.
They then see ServiceX coming from my IP (a VPN might precent this). Or they see ServiceX used by an account that is linked to me. Or they see a number of services paid for by the same Monero account.

Using a VPN is not always possible.

I've also seen machines that take cash but imagine these have CCTV to prevent theft and many link to me even harder.

in reply to MonaySimpson

This entry was edited (3 days ago)
in reply to MonaySimpson

Gov/Bank see me transfer money to Monero


They don't, Monero transactions are entirely anonymous and untraceable.

They see that Monero account pay for ServiceX


They don't, Monero transactions are entirely anonymous and untraceable.

they see a number of services paid for by the same Monero account.


They don't, Monero transactions are entirely anonymous and untraceable.

in reply to hirihit640

I've recently changed dozens of accounts to use Mozilla email masks. Most websites accept them, and the ones that don't I think twice if I actually need that service. I have Simple Login and 3 custom domains if I really want to, before I give out a personally identifiable name. I've only seen one service that was super strict and only allowed gmail, outlook/hotmail, and yahoo.
in reply to Eager Eagle

I've also used duck.com's free email masks with great success

Not quite what OP is talking about but useful in most cases

This entry was edited (2 days ago)
in reply to hirihit640

Outlook gives you aliases, but obviously we're not trying to use big bro tech.

Proton paid does this as does free with limited aliases.

Then there's SimpleLogin (also through Proton) that gives you a bunch of domains to use with several other domains. The only service that rejected the alias domain was Github, but it's trash and owned by MS so nbd.

in reply to hirihit640

Good post, haven't tried this as I haven't felt the need but it's good to know there is a market for this.
in reply to hirihit640

you can use certain temp mail providers for protons secondary email verification, money involvement makes it more insecure
This entry was edited (3 days ago)
in reply to Ross86

I'm fairly sure Protonmail does not accept this one for the secondary email check they use during signup
in reply to hirihit640

Not sure about proton mail but it works for reddit throwaways to get the verification code
in reply to Ross86

that's good to know! I haven't made reddit throwaways in a long time so it's nice to know that anonymous methods still work
in reply to hirihit640

yopmail, adguard, mailhole is open source and intermittently works

theres a gmail spoofer too idr what its called

This entry was edited (3 days ago)
in reply to hirihit640

A much easier and safer way to generate an anonymous email if you live in the EU is to use Posteo.

After you create an account, you get an account code. You can pay by mail with account info on a piece of paper. €1/month. Mail off some Euro, no returned address required.

in reply to Ch3rry314

Posteo accepts other currencies as well, though obviously mailing cash internationally takes longer.
in reply to Ch3rry314

Very cool I did not know this. Do they ever plan to support Monero? Physical payment methods are still unideal because security cameras can track you.
in reply to hirihit640

Track you where? Post it at a post office or drop point with gloves a cap if you want to feel like a badass, dont put a return address on it. How would anyone know by the time it gets to the legitimate company selling a very normal product where it came from to even check cameras?
in reply to Squizzy

There's too many unknowns for me to feel comfortable with it. Paper bills have identifiers so you have to make sure you got them anonymously, or launder them anonymously. Use gloves for everything. Mask your face without looking too suspicious. Hope that the post system doesn't secretly scan letter contents. Hope that the government isn't already tracking the movements of all citizens using cameras. Etc

Often the camera footage is enough. I've seen enough cases where police track down criminals via security camera footage, to know how effective it can be.

in reply to hirihit640

If you actually needed that level of privacy you wouldn't be posting on a public forum about it.
in reply to hirihit640

You don't need much money to pay for Posteo, it's 12 EUR a year. If you paranoid enough to suspect that bank tracks bills that you withdraw from ATM, just pay with these bills for a sandwich in a small convenience store. No standard surveillance camera will catch the serial numbers on the bills. Maybe do it a few times in different places.
Then send the envelope through the drop box in suburbs or rural area where are no cameras. Don't bring your phone to any of these locations.
You'll be fine.
in reply to pound_heap

This is why I just use darknet markets instead. Buying a new account takes only a few minutes, without leaving the house
in reply to hirihit640

get your old android phone, no phone # needed. install lineageos + gapps. go to some public wifi spot. register a fresh gmail account. jot the login down somewhere. reset/wipe your phone. you're done.

I'd rather stop communicating altogether than do anything that involves interacting with shitcoins in any shape or form.

in reply to yuman

Using a nearby public wifi spot, means that the email provider has your approximate location. If the feds get involved, then combined with security camera footage they can likely track you down.

Monero provides a way for people to pay for things anonymously, and is a lot more convenient then trying to pay with cash anonymously. For some people, their privacy is more important than whatever qualms they may have against crypto. Clearly you are not one of those people, and that's fine

This entry was edited (3 days ago)
in reply to hirihit640

Obviously, your threat model matters. You didn't say in the original post anything about it, and the mainstream privacy methods, I believe, are mostly to protect from general surveillance by commercial entities.
If you have to worry about feds, maybe just going offline is a safer choice.
in reply to pound_heap

I mention "anonymous" in the title, and many times in the post, and explained the scenario at the start of the post. It's true that the mainstream does not need anonymity, but anonymity was clearly the goal of the post.

And I agree that this method alone won't save you from the feds. It's just one tool in the arsenal

This entry was edited (2 days ago)
in reply to yuman

Why all that version over using the public access computers of your local library?
in reply to utopiah

I ain't got none of those and this is/was the only way you can open a gmail account without a phone number; as posited in OP, this is to be used only to register to stuff, not use it as a comms medium.
in reply to yuman

this doesn't work these days, google requires your phone number during signup even on android google app. also if you're using 'your' old android phone the IMEI is probably already tied as being owned by you..
This entry was edited (3 days ago)
in reply to hexagonwin

Google wants all your infos, no way around that
This entry was edited (3 days ago)
in reply to hexagonwin

I don't think that's correct as I've registered a fresh account as described, during the setup phase of a phone, within the last month and no phone number was needed. I'll give you the benefit of doubt as I don't want to do that again just to disprove a stranger on the internet, but if anything changed it had to change in this very, very recent period.

edit: the posit of OP was to open an account in order to be able to register to other accounts, not go jasonbourne on 5eyes and friends.

This entry was edited (3 days ago)
in reply to yuman

google's system is not simple, they have a very opaque process that determines whether the user's environment is "trustworthy" and asks for more information as needed.

it's still possible to create a new google account without explicitly tying a phone number in some cases, but it hasn't worked reliably for a very long time now.

until about 2023 creating it on an android <= 4.4 (kitkat) worked 100%, but now that also doesn't work.

in reply to yuman

Monero is really the only real anonymous currency, you SHOULD use it and so should everyone else. You shouldn't be okay having everything you do tracked.

I would love for a less environmentally impactful thing to be invented, but it doesn't exist yet.

This entry was edited (2 days ago)
in reply to hirihit640

I make burner inboxes on tutanota for longterm, yopmail for short-term. You might have to try multiple exits, but eventually you can get tuta to let you make an account over TOR.

Why pay for a burner?

That being said if you need a burner SMS number, no good free alternative to that since those usually involve simfarming.

Been a fan of smspool for that reason.

This entry was edited (3 days ago)
in reply to magic_smoke

as mentioned in other comments, making burners on Tuta is a pain. You often have to wait 1-2 days before they'll let you use the account, and often the account gets deleted during that period if it was made over Tor. Out of the 5-10 times I tried, I was only able to make 2-3 accounts. I'd rather pay for a reliable method.

And in my mind, paying is a more sustainable path. Protonmail and Tuta are pro-privacy, ultimately these services just want to avoid people creating unlimited spam accounts. Rotating Tor exits is something a bot can do, and so I wouldn't be surprised if Tuta started blocking it entirely. Payment is a barrier that doesn't cost your privacy. Protonmail and Tuta don't accept crypto during account creation, but darknet markets provide a workaround

This entry was edited (3 days ago)
in reply to hirihit640

Proton email is free and pretty easily accepts new throwaways without having to input any ID
in reply to geneva_convenience

every time I tried using VPN or Tor, they asked for phone number or a second email address. For the second email address, I've tried temporary email services but they all got rejected. Any recs?
in reply to hirihit640

I think it has to do with the frequency you create accounts. I've had it let me make an account, and I've had it demand more info.

Then I started using FF Relay —I know it's not super private, but this is just trial circumvention— then sites stopped accepting the Relay emails.

in reply to SupremeDonut

Fair enough. This is why I mentioned that the darknet method was the most reliable method I found. So far it hasn't failed me
in reply to hirihit640

Oh definitely, thanks for sharing! It was an interesting read.
in reply to SupremeDonut

But if he's not logged in (because he doesn't have an account) and he's using a VPN (and maybe changing every time) then frequency shouldn't matter bc Proton wouldn't know it's the same person
in reply to Drunk & Root

Haha well they may have the same problem with some services just not accepting emails from their url, they admit I'm the homepage that messages often end up in spam
This entry was edited (2 days ago)
in reply to hirihit640

Hmmm. Is this a new development with protonmail? I have used VPN plus a throwaway/temporary email to get a protonmail account before.
in reply to hirihit640

Hmmm. Is this a new development with protonmail? I have used VPN plus a throwaway/temporary email to get a protonmail account before.