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What if your company’s email system didn’t have to be a fragile stack of legacy software and single points of failure? In this episode, we dive into WildDuck, an open-source mail server that radically rethinks email infrastructure for large-scale organizations.
WildDuck is an opinionated email platform, meaning its developers made strong architectural choices up fron - largely inspired by how Gmail handles scale. Instead of relying on traditional file-based storage and fragile server configurations, WildDuck stores email in a distributed MongoDB cluster, uses stateless application servers behind a load balancer, and is built specifically for horizontal scaling and no single point of failure.
We explore how that architecture changes everything. By separating message text from heavy attachments, WildDuck can keep inbox searches fast on SSDs while storing large files on cheaper disks, dramatically reducing infrastructure costs. Its API-first design replaces old-school configuration files with modern web-based control, making large-scale automation and management far more flexible.
Security is another major focus. Built in Node.js, WildDuck benefits from memory-safe architecture and avoids many of the file-system and shell-level attack surfaces that plague traditional mail servers. It also supports application passwords, multi-factor authentication, GPG-based message encryption, rate limiting, and modern Unicode support, making it both globally capable and enterprise-ready.
This episode shows how open-source infrastructure like WildDuck is making it possible for organizations to reclaim their communications stack - with the performance, resilience, and control once reserved for tech giants.
Let’s have a look at your digital challenges together. What tools are you currently using? Are your processes optimal? How is the state of backups and security updates?
Digital Souvereignty is easily achived with Open Source software (which usually cost way less, too). Our division Safeserver offers hosting, operation and maintenance for countless Free and Open Source tools.
Try it now!
By GzEvD mbHWhat if your company’s email system didn’t have to be a fragile stack of legacy software and single points of failure? In this episode, we dive into WildDuck, an open-source mail server that radically rethinks email infrastructure for large-scale organizations.
WildDuck is an opinionated email platform, meaning its developers made strong architectural choices up fron - largely inspired by how Gmail handles scale. Instead of relying on traditional file-based storage and fragile server configurations, WildDuck stores email in a distributed MongoDB cluster, uses stateless application servers behind a load balancer, and is built specifically for horizontal scaling and no single point of failure.
We explore how that architecture changes everything. By separating message text from heavy attachments, WildDuck can keep inbox searches fast on SSDs while storing large files on cheaper disks, dramatically reducing infrastructure costs. Its API-first design replaces old-school configuration files with modern web-based control, making large-scale automation and management far more flexible.
Security is another major focus. Built in Node.js, WildDuck benefits from memory-safe architecture and avoids many of the file-system and shell-level attack surfaces that plague traditional mail servers. It also supports application passwords, multi-factor authentication, GPG-based message encryption, rate limiting, and modern Unicode support, making it both globally capable and enterprise-ready.
This episode shows how open-source infrastructure like WildDuck is making it possible for organizations to reclaim their communications stack - with the performance, resilience, and control once reserved for tech giants.
Let’s have a look at your digital challenges together. What tools are you currently using? Are your processes optimal? How is the state of backups and security updates?
Digital Souvereignty is easily achived with Open Source software (which usually cost way less, too). Our division Safeserver offers hosting, operation and maintenance for countless Free and Open Source tools.
Try it now!