Quote from: k5053 on September 21, 2012, 10:30 pmhey gentle geeks.. a question for u...if i have an account on tor mail.. am i forced to write to another one (i mean.. another tor mail address?) to secure our identities or i can communicate with other non tor addresses?the question seems quite stupid.. but i want to be sure!thank uA Tormail account is exactly like a normal webmail account like Hotmail, Gmail or Yahoo. You can send or receive email from within Tormail to/from other Tormail users, and you can also do the same to normal clearnet email addresses.-- Some general Tormail advice --However, there is an issue like has already been mentioned. You shouldn't trust the Tormail operators as a matter of principal. Could be they are nice guys, but who really can know.You should use PGP when possible, and also sometimes you should setup Tormail accounts for a single use (to prevent network analysis).Use the non javascript version of Tormail, turn off Javascript and use Squirrel Mail version.To switch between Tormail accounts, you should logout, switch your Tor identity and clear the Tormail cookie from your browser. Then wait a few minutes before logging in. This prevents association of Tormail account ownership, or at the least it prevents it being used as circumstantial evidence in a court of law.--Thought:It would be nice if an anonymous remailer system existed that wasn't dependent on a 3rd party. e.g. obfuscating who you are sending email to, so Tormail couldn't possibly do network analysis. You can do this on clearnet but it's a bit of a pain, especially since it's not your email you're trying to obfuscate. Any clever solutions out there? Edit: I just remembered there is one that Guru mentioned, but I mean something much simpler to setup as a single use situation, ideally one click setup.