While in Amarillo today, I stopped at one store to buy about $20 worth of supplies.
Everything went well and I paid with cash. They wanted an insane amount of information to complete the sale.
By the time they got to the e-mail address, I was kind of irritated so I gave them one of my most convoluted e-mail addresses that is not intended to be entered manually.
Replacing the domain with "example.com" for the purpose of privacy, the e-mail address I gave was 2.718281828459045235360287471352@example.com.
I like it. After all, My initial is 'e' so having the first N digits of e is perfect.
The sales girl worked really hard to enter it correctly and after a few bad starts, she got the user name part of the e-mail address entered. After that, the remaining issue was insurmountable. The store's sales software only allowed the entry of 40 or so character e-mail addresses. She could only enter part of the domain and could not finish.
My obvious objection to giving out my useful e-mail addresses is that I don't want vendors to pass the e-mail addresses around and resulting in highly irritating levels of spam. So ideally, I don't want to hand out 2.718281828459045235360287471352@example.com either.
For future events, I'm thinking of creating a few addresses like those in my signature block that are automagically forwarded to my actual e-mail address. Then, if it starts getting spammed, I just delete that address and won't receive anything to it any more while leaving my actual e-mail address in a more or less pristine condition.
Everything went well and I paid with cash. They wanted an insane amount of information to complete the sale.
By the time they got to the e-mail address, I was kind of irritated so I gave them one of my most convoluted e-mail addresses that is not intended to be entered manually.
Replacing the domain with "example.com" for the purpose of privacy, the e-mail address I gave was 2.718281828459045235360287471352@example.com.
I like it. After all, My initial is 'e' so having the first N digits of e is perfect.
The sales girl worked really hard to enter it correctly and after a few bad starts, she got the user name part of the e-mail address entered. After that, the remaining issue was insurmountable. The store's sales software only allowed the entry of 40 or so character e-mail addresses. She could only enter part of the domain and could not finish.
My obvious objection to giving out my useful e-mail addresses is that I don't want vendors to pass the e-mail addresses around and resulting in highly irritating levels of spam. So ideally, I don't want to hand out 2.718281828459045235360287471352@example.com either.
For future events, I'm thinking of creating a few addresses like those in my signature block that are automagically forwarded to my actual e-mail address. Then, if it starts getting spammed, I just delete that address and won't receive anything to it any more while leaving my actual e-mail address in a more or less pristine condition.
ef857002-e9da-4375-b80a-869a3518bb00@8shield.net