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  • Rated by cplaw on Oct 12, 11:06pm

    Alternate means of getting an email
  • Rated by Kazzandra on May 20 2009, 2:17pm

    I like this-- it has potential. however, I wouldn't use it for anything super serious due to privacy concerns. Looks good for sharing genealogy information, however.
  • Rated by advil098 on May 16 2009, 8:54pm

    Or you could just make a throwaway email account (yahoo or whatever) and forward the messages from there... and avoid the 3rd party potentially reading all your messages.
  • Rated by Diatribe75 on Jan 29 2009, 1:47am

    Whspr - If you need to receive a message by email, but you can't or dont want to give out your email address, then whspr gives you a URL to share instead. All you have to do is to share this URL with anyone you want to and if a person wants to send you a message, all he or she needs to do is to go that URL and post a message and it will come straight to your inbox. That way you don't have to reveal your email adress and still continue receiving messages and moreover no spams. From the page: Here's an example: Say you want to advertise a job opening on Twitter, and you don't want to share your company email address. Some applicants may not want to post a public @reply, and they can't send you a direct message if you don't already follow them. Include a whspr! URL, and they can reach you discreetly. How does it work? Fill out the form and we'll give you a URL you can post wherever you like. Viewers who click it will go to a form where they can send you a message. We forward the message to you. That's it. What about privacy and spam? When you create a whspr! URL, your email address remains hidden to those who send you messages. When someone sends you a message, he or she must provide an email address where they can be reached.