I always recommend using a real name, or if you are SURE of the previous tenant's name, you can use that. Or if you have a business you can put you receiving under. Using a fake name just means trouble. It's a massive numbers game you are playing attempting to get illicits in the mail, and anything that makes your package out of the ordinary increases the odds of interception. This includes your mailman not recognizing the name on the envelope.If you want plausible deniability, keep a magic marker by the door. If you get a package you don't recognize, put a line through your address and write "return to sender" on the envelope. Mail-order drug cases are very hard to prosecute and usually require either a substantial amount of drugs or a very established pattern to even have a go at it. Nobody can ever prove that you intended to receive those items, unless they can build a history or demonstrate that you purchased it via your web history.99% of interceptions on a personal level are either tossed into the incinerator or kept to build a forensic case on the SENDER, if he's dumb enough to not be checking for prints and hairs before his package goes on its merry way. The most I have ever heard of anyone receiving for a personal amount, who wasn't on probation or parole or anything, was just getting a letter from customs saying "hey, this was addressed to you, we took it." They usually don't even bother to accuse in the letter, they just recite the statutes that ban whatever illicit it is and ban mailing prohibited substances.I have not heard of many people on here getting into any kind of trouble, and half the ones I have heard of were related to IRL mistakes and had nothing to do with SR in the first place. It's a pretty short list, and if you are smart about being a customer you mitigate the odds close to 0. (This includes choosing vendors who have a known reputation for taking their packaging seriously - this is the number one reason why buyers get hassled and stuff gets intercepted: Incompetent packaging.)