- A proxy email alias for every account, listing, and sign-up
- A virtual phone number you can hand out and burn afterwards
- Pause or delete anything that starts attracting spam
- Free to start — no card, no commitment
The problem with using your real details for everything
Your real email address is a permanent identifier. Once a marketplace, an app, or a quote-request form has it, you have effectively no recourse if it ends up on a list, in a breach, or in the inbox of someone you’d rather not hear from.
Same for your mobile number, only worse — you can’t easily change it, and the minute it’s leaked you start getting calls about the accident you didn’t have.
The honest fix is to stop handing them out.
What an Incognifi-equipped individual looks like
- Marketplaces. When you list something to sell, the listing carries a proxy email and virtual number. Buyers reach you, the sale completes, you delete the alias. The number that gets the “are you still selling this?” message six months later is a number that no longer exists.
- Dating. When a conversation moves off-app, it moves to an alias — not your personal number. If things go well, you can graduate to real details. If they don’t, you delete the alias and the conversation is genuinely over.
- Sign-ups. Every free trial, every loyalty card, every “subscribe for 10% off” gets its own alias. Junk mail goes to a single, deletable place.
- Recruiters and CV. Send a polished alias on your CV instead of your personal email. Pause it once you’re in the new role.
- Quotes and renewals. Get five home insurance quotes without three of them still bothering you next year.
Why it’s a habit worth forming
The first month or two it feels like a small overhead. By month three, every spam wave you used to brace for stops landing — and the difference between “this alias is loud, I’ll delete it” and “I have to live with this forever” becomes the most obviously useful thing about the whole system.