Buy an account from anonymizer.com, and sign up for the "Secure Tunneling" option -- $10 per month. On your local machine, you use SSH configured to port-forward ports 25 (SMTP) and 110 (POP3) to mail.anonymizer.com. You configure your local POP3/SMTP clients to connect to localhost, and the connections are securely forwarded through the Anonymizer. This can be done with Netscape, for example.
This assumes that you have some way of setting up SSH locally, and that there's no keystroke monitoring going on. In both cases, you're probably better off if you have a linux box.
Buy an account from anonymizer.com, and sign up for the "Secure Tunneling" option -- $10 per month. On your local machine, you use SSH configured to port-forward ports 25 (SMTP) and 110 (POP3) to mail.anonymizer.com. You configure your local POP3/SMTP clients to connect to localhost, and the connections are securely forwarded through the Anonymizer. This can be done with Netscape, for example.
This assumes that you have some way of setting up SSH locally, and that there's no keystroke monitoring going on. In both cases, you're probably better off if you have a linux box.
GP