OtherInbox wants to help you keep spam out of your regular email inbox. The company gives you a virtually unlimited amount of disposable email addresses to use whenever you think somebody might start sending you spam or sell your address to spammers. Unlike other disposable email services, OtherInbox doesn't just give you a random email address, but a personal sub-domain to which you can add an unlimited amount of addresses. OtherInbox is currently in private beta, but we were able to get a few invites for our readers.
Once you have registered your sub-domain, you don't have to register the actual email addresses you want to use. Instead, any email sent to your sub-domain, no matter the part before the '@,' will arrive in your inbox. By default, OtherInbox filters incoming email by sender, but it also makes sense to sign up for new services with addresses like "123onlinestore@xxx.otherinbox.com" so that you can keep track on who is potentially selling your email address to spammers.
By default, OtherInbox will email the first message that comes in from a new address to your standard email account. Every forwarded message is prefaced by a number of links that allow you to turn of forwarding messages from this address or to block further messages from this sender. You can also have Otherinbox send you a daily digest of new messages. IMAP support is forthcoming.

There are a large number of potential uses for OtherInbox, but the most straightforward is to use it for signing up for new services online. If a company starts sending you spam, you can just block every email from this service or to this email address with just one click.
The OtherInbox interface is similar to that of pretty much every other online email service (and actually quite reminiscent of Apple's MobileMe), but the main difference is that OtherInbox automatically filters your mail by sender and creates a folder for every sender (see screenshot).
If you are already using Gmail, you could, of course, make use of the "+" feature, which allows you to create email address like "john123+facebook@gmail.com," but Gmail does not filter those out automatically like OtherInbox would, which means you would still have to create a filter for every one of those addresses. Over time, that simply takes too much time and work.
Overall, OtherInbox is the slickest disposable address service we have seen so far. While other services like GuerillaMail, MintEmail, or e4ward offer similar services, none of them feature the simple user interface and complete set of features that OtherInbox does.
We quickly ran out of our first batch of invites, Otherinbox gave us a few more to hand out to our readers. Just click here to claim yours.
Comments
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sweet! thanks! just signed up.
Posted by: ~C4Chaos
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September 10, 2008 9:28 AM
Hi,
nice idea, i tried the link for the invites but i think they're almost gone out. i would appreciate an invite if you have some more.
thanks.
That is great, I already use a forward to my real email. That way if things get out of hand I dump the secondary email
Grr... missed the invites! No wonder 25 ran out so fast! :)
sounds like a great service, thanks for highlighting it. i requested an invitation, hopefully i'll get one soon!
sounds like a neat idea but why not just create another gmail or yahoo account to use for spam? I have 2 email accounts, one is for signing up for new services. why specifically go after otherinbox?
Jacob
Just FYI - if you missed out on the first batch of invites - I just updated the link with a few more.
Vinay,
must have got my account just seconds before you tried to get yours. Sincerely sorry for you but, am happy for me. ;)
Thank you, Frederic.
Enterto.com are trying to do something very similar to this, although Otherinbox appears to just simply do a GMail with the organizing of important emails, this point from the article confused me though "shows you the real reason why you are receiving each message", so every time you recieve a spam message it will tell you why you have receieved it, a little random.
Posted by: Josh Chandler
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September 10, 2008 12:01 PM
Thanks for the invite
It sounds cool, but I missed the invites. :(
I want the invite.
for similar purpose
liquidid.net let user create email aliases
I wonder what the guys at Boxbe think about this?
Posted by: factoryjoe.com
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September 11, 2008 6:28 PM