This is coming from a general perspective of wanting more privacy and seeing news of Mozilla creating an email service “which will definitely not train AI on your email”. Sure Mozilla, whatever you say.
Rant aside, here’s my question: is it possible to store all of your email on your own infrastructure (VPS or even NAS at home) and simply using an encrypted relay to send emails out to the public internet? My idea is that this removes the problems of keeping your IP whitelisted from the consumer, but the email provider doesn’t actually hold your emails. This means your emails remain completely in your control, but you don’t have to worry about not being able to send emails to other people as long as your storage backend is alive.
I don’t know much about email to comment on what this would take. I think something similar is already possible with an SMTP relay from most email providers, but the problem is that my email also resides on their servers. I don’t like that. I want my email to live on my servers alone.
Do you think this is possible? Does any company already do this?
Thanks
I use sendgrid as my outgoing smtp relay to avoid ip reputation issues you mention. You still have to configure your dns settings for spf and dkim pointing at their servers instead of yours. Their free tier is 10x the email I’ll ever send so it doesn’t cost anything. There are a few companies in this space with free tiers. It works, but it isnt Gmail level deliverability. I still get spam binned occasionally.
I see a lot of spam coming from sendgrid, so I wonder how long they can continue operating that way until they get blocked completely by one of the larger mailbox providers.
The previous commenter mentioned mxroute and I got sendgrid from your comment. I will look at these products, is there any other provider that you recommend?