Reviews for Firefox Relay
Firefox Relay by Mozilla Firefox
1,986 reviews
- Rated 4 out of 5by gmhOT, 4 years agoSo far so good!! I agree with others that this would be even better if process was streamlined. My great difficulty is finding that Facebook does not accept it for a new email address (I gather due to the sub-domains) - If this was taken care of - it would be a 5 star rating - Thanks
- Rated 4 out of 5by Jean, 4 years ago
- Rated 5 out of 5by Bjordi20091, 4 years ago
- Rated 5 out of 5by MC Saeid, 4 years agoGreat product. However, I was not able to get an email forwarded from archive.org. The FAQ page led me to here.
- Rated 5 out of 5by QuickFoxD, 4 years ago
- Rated 5 out of 5by Firefox user 16464118, 4 years agoLove this extension! Very simple but powerful and the integration with the browser is wonderful.
- Rated 5 out of 5by Firefox user 16869134, 4 years ago
- Rated 5 out of 5by Kirt, 4 years ago
- Rated 5 out of 5by yasin, 4 years ago
- Rated 4 out of 5by modcolocko, 4 years agoA useful extension that has many purposes. My main criticism is the extensions menu, when you click the menu bar icon, you have to go do a dedicated tab to manage aliases, meaning the menu serves little purpose, it should really hide the introduction when you add a alias, which you should be able to do in the on click menu, the menu in its current state is more of a fancy hyperlink.
- Rated 5 out of 5by Shelling, 4 years ago5 aliases limitation is way too little to cover all of daily life accounts to separate footprint and prevent targeting ads across services. how about extend to more than 5 accounts?
- Rated 5 out of 5by Firefox user 16864857, 4 years agoSimple yet effective to hide your original email.
You will get 5 Free aliases and there you can manage all of your accounts
Amazing Firefox - Rated 5 out of 5by NazmusLabs, 4 years ago
- Rated 5 out of 5by Sebu, 4 years ago
- Rated 5 out of 5by Robert Noyce, 4 years agoA great service. I've been doing something like this for > 20 years due to risk of breaches. I retire breached email accounts and make new ones to replace it, alas some email addresses are priceless as I joined gmail when it was in beta in 1997, and had a choice of easy nice names without numbers on them. So what I've done is made disposable email addresses that forward to my main email, and rarely give it out. Creating aliases on-the-fly that forward is a better alternative, so it preserves the main email, very much like how Virtual Account numbers use generated credit card numbers. The generated numbers are easily discarded and replaced. I also do this for my cellphone number, and change it periodically, since many providers allow this without cost, but keep an alias that is unchanged, but easy to change too if needed. Kudos to your team to think of new ways to enhance privacy and security.
The 150KB limit is a bit small, but adequate to inform the main email of a message from X. It would be helpful if during forwarding you stip photos, images etc., to save quota space, and transmit only text and attachments. Strip the attachment if it exceeds your limit. if you can provide a link to the native content if it exceed 150KB, and all such links expire in say X days , regardless to save server space and give users the opportunity to see the email at native size. - Rated 5 out of 5by Firefox user 14508203, 4 years ago
- Rated 5 out of 5by Fixer, 4 years ago
- Rated 5 out of 5by mamede, 4 years ago
- Rated 3 out of 5by Firefox user 15188069, 4 years ago
- Rated 3 out of 5by Sidney Whitaker, 4 years agoAn excellent protection! I had no idea I was using/benefiting from it--but then I'm a complete amateur.
- Rated 5 out of 5by Dogukan, 4 years ago