"hide-my-email alias" to have a "main account" feature to keep our main email safe even when using VPN
I want to use VPN = Log in using main account and password. I want to use Lumo or Pass or any of them? once again, the issue of "is it safe for me to even copy paste my password?" but what about my email?
Sugestion is: Allow Proton Unlimited features (VPN, Lumo, Pass) to be accessed via a secondary "Special" Proton Account linked to the main subscription
Description: I propose the ability to create a secondary Proton Account, designated as a "Special" or "Incognito" account, that is directly linked to an existing Proton Unlimited subscription. This secondary account would grant full access to Proton VPN, Lumo, and Proton Pass features without requiring the user to log in with their primary main account credentials.
Currently, accessing these services requires logging into the main account, which exposes the user's primary identity and data trail to every interaction. The proposed feature would allow users to:
Create a secondary Proton Account (using a hide-my-email alias) that inherits the paid features (VPN, Lumo, Pass) of the main subscription.
Use this secondary account for high-risk or privacy-sensitive activities, such as researching products that track user data, communicating with entities that demand extensive personal information (e.g., moving companies), or general browsing where the main identity should remain isolated.
Ensure that the risk of abuse or crime does not increase, as the secondary account is strictly tied to the verified main subscription and cannot exist independently.
Constraint: To prevent abuse and maintain the integrity of the "one idea" rule, this feature should be limited to one active "Special" account per main subscription at any given time. And have an expiration timmer so also cover the risk of people abusing this to "speed" their account or other issues.
Rationale: This approach solves the privacy dilemma where users need to utilize Proton's privacy tools (VPN, Lumo) but cannot do so without exposing their main account identity to the very services they are trying to protect themselves from. By linking a disposable, secondary account to the main paid subscription, users gain a dedicated "safe zone" for sensitive tasks. This does not create a loophole for free access, as the secondary account is dependent on the paid main account, but it significantly enhances the utility of the Proton ecosystem for users who require compartmentalization of their digital identity. And on the ideea of one active, this means that if said account is compromised and will get rid of it, or we simple want to use a different one, we can at any time