Disposable emails & an API,
straight to your Telegram
Create unlimited throwaway email addresses, receive everything in your messenger, and kill any address the moment spam starts. Free. No limits. No logs.
$ curl -X POST -d "Wheres the money Lebowski?" \
https://push.tg/YOUR_EMAIL_PREFIX_HERE
What it does
Fresh email anytime
Spin up a new address whenever you need one and get incoming mail right in your messenger.
Kill the spam
Delete an address the moment someone starts spamming it.
Works in groups
Add the bot to a group chat and the whole group gets the emails.
Unique links
Share a unique link and anyone on the internet can send you a message.
API access
Send yourself messages programmatically — it’s just a single POST request.
Unlimited & forever
Create as many emails and links as you like — they’re yours until you delete them.
See it in action
API
Send yourself messages programmatically — great for piping monitoring alerts straight into your messenger. Works in groups too.
curl -X POST -d "Wheres the money Lebowski?" https://push.tg/YOUR_EMAIL_PREFIX_HERE
FAQ
Why do I need @trafficRobot?
Create a unique email address for every service you sign up for, so you can cut a spammer off the moment they start abusing it — or simply stay anonymous. Everything you receive goes straight to your Telegram.
And why would I need links?
A link is a convenient way to let anyone on the interwebz send you a message while you stay anonymous and spam-free. If someone starts abusing it — just delete it.
Can I reply?
No — but you can see the sender’s address, tap it, and reply from your regular mail app. Messages that arrive via web forms or the API can’t be replied to, by their nature.
How much does it cost?
It’s free — no limitations, no ads.
What about the API?
Use the API to send messages to yourself — a handy way to pipe monitoring alerts straight into your messenger. It’s just a single POST request.
Are there any limits?
None. Create as many emails as you like and send as many messages as you want.
What’s up with the name?
“Traffic robot” is what traffic lights are called in South Africa. And since all bot names have to end in “-bot”, it was simply a cool name that hadn’t been taken yet.
What about security?
@trafficRobot doesn’t even keep logs — nothing that passes through it is stored.
What’s the deal with trafficrobot.tk vs push.tg?
trafficrobot.tk was the old domain. The entire .tk zone stopped working, and the domain can’t be recovered — nor can any email address you may have had on @trafficrobot.tk.
Can you recover / grant me access to email xxx?
No.
Open source
Licensed WTFPL — github.com/Overtorment/trafficrobot
push.tg