Both are risky, but at least you can decouple your address from your storage.
If something happens to your gmail, you lose both your address and your storage at once.
If it is your domain, you presumably still have access to your host (which may just be gmail). And if you lose access to your host, at least you can still redirect your domain somewhere else.
Nothing is foolproof, but you can split one large dependency into two smaller dependencies.
If something happens to your gmail, you lose both your address and your storage at once.
If it is your domain, you presumably still have access to your host (which may just be gmail). And if you lose access to your host, at least you can still redirect your domain somewhere else.
Nothing is foolproof, but you can split one large dependency into two smaller dependencies.