Some web sites require an e-mail address and send a confirming e-mail message to activate an account. The “confirmation” might be an excuse to get an e-mail address that can become a spam target.

Ten Minute Mail sets up a temporary e-mail address that expires after ten minutes – just long enough to get the validation message. Here’s an article about the Ten Minute Mail site.

It’s worth noting another useful site, BugMeNot.com, a huge collection of login names and passwords for sites with content behind a free “registration” requirement.

The Slashdot community reacted to the story about Ten Minute Mail by comparing it to their favorite services for temporary e-mail addresses and other anonymity tools. There’s a lot of them – no surprise in these paranoid times.

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