

Polymail, also free, is more of a traditional email app. Spike is unusual and not our first choice, but it's definitely unique and could be what some people are looking for. Other features include a unified inbox, email grouping options, quick responses, a unified calendar, and snooze. Spike removes email headers, signatures, and more to make the emailing experience chat-like, and it prioritizes emails sent by people while filing newsletters and other automatic emails to other folders. Or pretending that now that they opted out (why wasnt it there from the start to defaulted to have to opt IN not out) that "trust us nowwwww we pwomise we're vewy sowwy!!!" like the South Park BP Oil CEO parody.
POLYMAIL DOES NOT DISPLAY MESSAGES CORRECTLY DOWNLOAD
Heck Edison already had a data scandal last year with live people reading email and people STILL somehow choose to download and use the app. I balance my risk use the Outlook app but the odds of Microsoft reading email etc with the data is SO much lower than Edison, Spark or other small fly by night companies with much less corporate responsibility if caught (if they get bought tomm who cares about a scandal). If privacy is the biggest concern then using the stock mail app or your service's dedicated app for each is the only route. You may have not given away the keys to the castle, but you installed a big bay window for them to peep in and see. No matter how secure your email service is, once you give that date to 3rd party email apps, or pass through their servers, then the secure email service means a lot less. Therein lies the problem with 3rd party apps.
