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Cette page vous permet d’examiner les variables générées par le filtre d’abus pour une modification individuelle.
Variables générées pour cette modification
| Variable | Valeur |
|---|---|
Nom du compte de l’utilisateur (user_name) | '46.8.106.50' |
Âge du compte de l’utilisateur (user_age) | 0 |
Identifiant de la page (page_id) | 0 |
Espace de noms de la page (page_namespace) | 0 |
Titre de la page sans l’espace de noms (page_title) | 'Mail.com 100a' |
Titre complet de la page (page_prefixedtitle) | 'Mail.com 100a' |
Action (action) | 'edit' |
Résumé / motif des modifications (summary) | '' |
Temps depuis la dernière modification en secondes (page_last_edit_age) | null |
Ancien modèle de contenu (old_content_model) | '' |
Nouveau modèle de contenu (new_content_model) | 'wikitext' |
Texte wiki de l’ancienne page, avant la modification (old_wikitext) | '' |
Wikicode de la page après la modification (new_wikitext) | 'Mail.com: A Versatile Free Email Service with Unique Domain Choices in 2026<br>In an era when most people automatically reach for Gmail, Outlook or ProtonMail, mail.com continues to offer a refreshing alternative. Operating since the mid-1990s and owned by United Internet (the company behind GMX) since 2010, this U.S.-based free webmail provider stands out primarily thanks to its enormous selection of domain endings and generous storage — features that remain very competitive even in 2026.<br>The signature feature of mail.com is the ability to choose your email address from over 200 different domains. While most free providers limit you to one or two endings, mail.com lets users pick something far more personalized or profession-specific. A few popular and creative examples available in 2026 include engineer.com, consultant.com, elvisfan.com, usa.com, doctor.com, techie.com, cheerful.com, accountant.com, linuxmail.org and graduate.com, and hundreds more covering hobbies, professions, nationalities, cities, sports and humor.<br>This variety makes mail.com especially attractive to freelancers who want a more professional-looking address without buying a custom domain, hobbyists and fans who enjoy themed emails, people who want to keep their main email private and use aliases for newsletters or registrations, and users in countries where certain mainstream providers feel too corporate or heavily tracked. With one account you can create and manage up to 10 email addresses (aliases), all arriving in the same inbox.<br>The free account in 2026 offers 65 GB of email storage, which is among the highest in the free tier, plus 2 GB of cloud storage for sharing larger files via link. The maximum attachment size is 30 MB, with the option to use a cloud link for bigger files. The service supports web access as well as iOS and Android apps, and it also works with IMAP and POP3 in desktop clients like Outlook or Thunderbird.<br>Security features include SSL/TLS encryption for login and transit, built-in antivirus scanning of attachments, smart spam filtering, two-factor authentication and optional disposable alias addresses. It does not offer end-to-end encryption like ProtonMail or Tutanota, so it should not be the first choice for users who need maximum privacy against the provider itself. Still, for everyday personal and semi-professional use, its security level is adequate and comparable to most mainstream free services.<br>The web interface is clean and functional, though some long-time users note it feels slightly less polished than Gmail’s design. Key conveniences include drag-and-drop folder organization, email templates, a mail collector function that pulls messages from other accounts, customizable themes and avatars, integrated basic office tools for viewing and editing documents, and a regular blog with email etiquette and security tips.<br>Mail.com is a strong fit if you want a distinctive, non-mainstream email address, lots of free storage without linking to a big-tech ecosystem, multiple aliases under one login, or a simple, no-nonsense email experience without aggressive upselling of extra storage. You should consider alternatives if you need end-to-end encryption (ProtonMail, Tutanota), deep integration with a productivity suite (Gmail + Google Workspace), corporate-grade features and compliance (Microsoft 365, Zoho Mail), or almost zero ads and very strong privacy focus (StartMail, Posteo).<br>Mail.com is not trying to compete with Google or Microsoft on ecosystem breadth or AI-powered features. Instead, it quietly delivers one of the most flexible free email experiences still available in 2026 — especially valuable for anyone who wants an email address that actually says something about them. If you’ve ever wanted a catlover.com, nightowls.net or cybersecurity.expert address without paying for a custom domain, mail.com remains one of the easiest and most storage-rich ways to get it.<br><br>[https://www.mail.com/ https://www.mail.com/]' |
Diff unifié des changements faits lors de la modification (edit_diff) | '@@ -1,0 +1,1 @@
+Mail.com: A Versatile Free Email Service with Unique Domain Choices in 2026<br>In an era when most people automatically reach for Gmail, Outlook or ProtonMail, mail.com continues to offer a refreshing alternative. Operating since the mid-1990s and owned by United Internet (the company behind GMX) since 2010, this U.S.-based free webmail provider stands out primarily thanks to its enormous selection of domain endings and generous storage — features that remain very competitive even in 2026.<br>The signature feature of mail.com is the ability to choose your email address from over 200 different domains. While most free providers limit you to one or two endings, mail.com lets users pick something far more personalized or profession-specific. A few popular and creative examples available in 2026 include engineer.com, consultant.com, elvisfan.com, usa.com, doctor.com, techie.com, cheerful.com, accountant.com, linuxmail.org and graduate.com, and hundreds more covering hobbies, professions, nationalities, cities, sports and humor.<br>This variety makes mail.com especially attractive to freelancers who want a more professional-looking address without buying a custom domain, hobbyists and fans who enjoy themed emails, people who want to keep their main email private and use aliases for newsletters or registrations, and users in countries where certain mainstream providers feel too corporate or heavily tracked. With one account you can create and manage up to 10 email addresses (aliases), all arriving in the same inbox.<br>The free account in 2026 offers 65 GB of email storage, which is among the highest in the free tier, plus 2 GB of cloud storage for sharing larger files via link. The maximum attachment size is 30 MB, with the option to use a cloud link for bigger files. The service supports web access as well as iOS and Android apps, and it also works with IMAP and POP3 in desktop clients like Outlook or Thunderbird.<br>Security features include SSL/TLS encryption for login and transit, built-in antivirus scanning of attachments, smart spam filtering, two-factor authentication and optional disposable alias addresses. It does not offer end-to-end encryption like ProtonMail or Tutanota, so it should not be the first choice for users who need maximum privacy against the provider itself. Still, for everyday personal and semi-professional use, its security level is adequate and comparable to most mainstream free services.<br>The web interface is clean and functional, though some long-time users note it feels slightly less polished than Gmail’s design. Key conveniences include drag-and-drop folder organization, email templates, a mail collector function that pulls messages from other accounts, customizable themes and avatars, integrated basic office tools for viewing and editing documents, and a regular blog with email etiquette and security tips.<br>Mail.com is a strong fit if you want a distinctive, non-mainstream email address, lots of free storage without linking to a big-tech ecosystem, multiple aliases under one login, or a simple, no-nonsense email experience without aggressive upselling of extra storage. You should consider alternatives if you need end-to-end encryption (ProtonMail, Tutanota), deep integration with a productivity suite (Gmail + Google Workspace), corporate-grade features and compliance (Microsoft 365, Zoho Mail), or almost zero ads and very strong privacy focus (StartMail, Posteo).<br>Mail.com is not trying to compete with Google or Microsoft on ecosystem breadth or AI-powered features. Instead, it quietly delivers one of the most flexible free email experiences still available in 2026 — especially valuable for anyone who wants an email address that actually says something about them. If you’ve ever wanted a catlover.com, nightowls.net or cybersecurity.expert address without paying for a custom domain, mail.com remains one of the easiest and most storage-rich ways to get it.<br><br>[https://www.mail.com/ https://www.mail.com/]
' |
Lignes ajoutées par la modification (added_lines) | [
0 => 'Mail.com: A Versatile Free Email Service with Unique Domain Choices in 2026<br>In an era when most people automatically reach for Gmail, Outlook or ProtonMail, mail.com continues to offer a refreshing alternative. Operating since the mid-1990s and owned by United Internet (the company behind GMX) since 2010, this U.S.-based free webmail provider stands out primarily thanks to its enormous selection of domain endings and generous storage — features that remain very competitive even in 2026.<br>The signature feature of mail.com is the ability to choose your email address from over 200 different domains. While most free providers limit you to one or two endings, mail.com lets users pick something far more personalized or profession-specific. A few popular and creative examples available in 2026 include engineer.com, consultant.com, elvisfan.com, usa.com, doctor.com, techie.com, cheerful.com, accountant.com, linuxmail.org and graduate.com, and hundreds more covering hobbies, professions, nationalities, cities, sports and humor.<br>This variety makes mail.com especially attractive to freelancers who want a more professional-looking address without buying a custom domain, hobbyists and fans who enjoy themed emails, people who want to keep their main email private and use aliases for newsletters or registrations, and users in countries where certain mainstream providers feel too corporate or heavily tracked. With one account you can create and manage up to 10 email addresses (aliases), all arriving in the same inbox.<br>The free account in 2026 offers 65 GB of email storage, which is among the highest in the free tier, plus 2 GB of cloud storage for sharing larger files via link. The maximum attachment size is 30 MB, with the option to use a cloud link for bigger files. The service supports web access as well as iOS and Android apps, and it also works with IMAP and POP3 in desktop clients like Outlook or Thunderbird.<br>Security features include SSL/TLS encryption for login and transit, built-in antivirus scanning of attachments, smart spam filtering, two-factor authentication and optional disposable alias addresses. It does not offer end-to-end encryption like ProtonMail or Tutanota, so it should not be the first choice for users who need maximum privacy against the provider itself. Still, for everyday personal and semi-professional use, its security level is adequate and comparable to most mainstream free services.<br>The web interface is clean and functional, though some long-time users note it feels slightly less polished than Gmail’s design. Key conveniences include drag-and-drop folder organization, email templates, a mail collector function that pulls messages from other accounts, customizable themes and avatars, integrated basic office tools for viewing and editing documents, and a regular blog with email etiquette and security tips.<br>Mail.com is a strong fit if you want a distinctive, non-mainstream email address, lots of free storage without linking to a big-tech ecosystem, multiple aliases under one login, or a simple, no-nonsense email experience without aggressive upselling of extra storage. You should consider alternatives if you need end-to-end encryption (ProtonMail, Tutanota), deep integration with a productivity suite (Gmail + Google Workspace), corporate-grade features and compliance (Microsoft 365, Zoho Mail), or almost zero ads and very strong privacy focus (StartMail, Posteo).<br>Mail.com is not trying to compete with Google or Microsoft on ecosystem breadth or AI-powered features. Instead, it quietly delivers one of the most flexible free email experiences still available in 2026 — especially valuable for anyone who wants an email address that actually says something about them. If you’ve ever wanted a catlover.com, nightowls.net or cybersecurity.expert address without paying for a custom domain, mail.com remains one of the easiest and most storage-rich ways to get it.<br><br>[https://www.mail.com/ https://www.mail.com/]'
] |
Horodatage Unix de la modification (timestamp) | '1768691250' |