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Drop a line, will you?

Hotmail accounts expire earlier

PC World

By Joris Evers

(IDG) -- Users of Microsoft's Hotmail e-mail service who don't sign in at least once every 30 days will find their account deactivated, the company confirms.

Previously, a Hotmail account was set to expire after 45 days. The change came into effect in the United States on November 1 and is to be implemented worldwide starting next month, says Abdeluheb Choho, a spokesperson for Microsoft's MSN.

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On deactivation, all personal items including e-mail messages and address books are deleted and incoming messages are no longer accepted. After deactivation a user has 90 days to reactivate the account before the e-mail address is removed from the system, Choho says.

"We want to focus on those customers who actively use the service," says Choho.

Users don't have to send or receive e-mail messages to keep their account, says Choho.

"All it takes to reset the counter is signing on. We will never ask a user to send or forward e-mail. That is a tactic only used in chain messages or hoaxes," he says.

All Hotmail users -- there are 118 million accounts worldwide -- will be informed of the changes in the monthly Hotmail member letter. U.S. users were told of the new policy on October 31, and users in other parts of the world will be updated in their November newsletter, Choho says.

Customers who pay for extra storage capacity for their Hotmail accounts will be exempt from the new policy. However, this service is only available in the U.S., according to Choho.


 
 
 
 


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