What I mean is if you depend on paid services for things like email or your password manager, you have to be able to guarantee that you will always be able to pay for it or else you will be locked out of that critical service to some extent. For example if you were to sign up for Tutanota and have one email for personal use, another for healthcare, and another for banking, and then at some point you are either in a tough financial spot or your payment method gets lost or stolen, you might lose your email for critical services.
Simple login doesn’t have this issue because they promise that even if you stop paying you get to keep the aliases you’ve made. But most services don’t operate like that.
I know the default answer would be “what are the odds you won’t be able to afford $10 a month”. For context I am poor and have always been poor, so it’s very easy for me to understand that even if I become successful there will always be the possibility that I might lose everything, and the whole point of security is preparing for when bad things happen, even if they don’t.
I’m curious if anyone else shares this opinion, because I haven’t heard anyone else in the privacy space talk about it. Probably because most prominent people aren’t dirt poor and don’t factor that into their threat model.
Oh yeah I forgot about that. I wonder if there’s some way of completely self hosting a domain to then be used for email. My first thought would be an onion website or maybe I2p, that then somehow connects to the rest of the internet to be able to be used like a normal email. Not sure if that exists but that would probably be the ultimate free and private setup.
You do not want to look into how to create a custom tld
Couldn’t you avoid ICANN altogether by making a domain on tor? I’m only just now learning how all this works but from what I can tell tor is disconnected from all the ICANN stuff
https://icannwiki.org/Brand_TLD
gTLD evaluation fee is $230k
https://newgtldprogram.icann.org/en/resources/faqs