The interesting part will be adding WhatsApp users to actually trusted private messaging apps such as literally anything else.
cooopsspace
If you're like me and your work uses Bitwarden, your personal family accounts are free too. And unconnected to the business account of course.
It's a great idea and in a way it's already being done with those survey companies and stuff.
The thing is, what you propose needs to be backed by strong privacy laws. Consumer protections and legislation that mandates the deletion of data once the need for it expires. Basically, none of this should happen without a EU style GDPR in the respective country.
This is going to be controversial, but if I was a user of these three scummy sites what you say above isn't the hill I'm willing to die on or care about.
However I have half a dozen domains, I could quite easily add one or two more for dumb shit like this if I wanted to.
I have a pseudo domain that has none of my info on it.
It's something along the lines of "thisisspam.com" that forwards to my personal email accounts.
The point is, since I and not the service control my addresses I can take them anywhere.
The free market is supposed to be about competition, that's why basically every industry in the US is made up of 3-5 mega corps that collude together to fuck Americans.
Insurance industry is like a 500m sprint where every runner has agreed to only walk. Hence nobody has better service, no innovation, costs are high and customers lose out.
You dont need any commercial VPN provider unless you're a persecuted minority or under a strict government regime, get off them.
You can't verify that any of them actually comply with their no log policies and all they're doing is aggregating people who have stuff to hide onto it.
And especially not fucking Windscribe.
And VPNs are always slow, hence not using them unless they're required.
It almost certainly won't, but it's nice to hope.
It might remove the face to face human bias of a GP but it doesn't make up for the decades of preconceived or absent research about women or minorities.
The free market is one idea, but how about legislation to force insurance companies to pay out for illnesses that natural born human beings get and stop screwing Americans.
Theres plenty of good reason to keep your alias provider separate from your email provider.
The first being you can lift and shift to another email provider very easily.
Secondly if something happens to your account you don't lose the lot.
Thirdly, just get a domain with alias provider and it matters not what email provider you use ever.
It should go without saying but your next phone needs to not be an iPhone.
No, but your country can also sue and you'll get your settlement.
Every country should grab their pound of flesh.