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Cancelling your Passport.NET Account?

An anonymous reader asks: "i read on the Passport.NET site that 'Microsoft has announced plans to discontinue the .NET Passport express purchase service' AKA .NET Passport wallet. This may well be old news but the reason i stumbled on it is I want to discontinue my Passport account. There is a link on the account maintainace page that allows just this - however it bounced me to my Hotmail account which I had to close first. However my Passport account is still open and when I try to close it I just get bounced to the Hotmail reactivation page... (the reason i am so hyper about this is anger at being automatically opted-ini to two seperate information sharing schemes without being asked - no wonder there was so much spam! Have any of you had a similar problem closing your account? Has anyone managed? If so how?"

7 of 38 comments (clear)

  1. Yes by jsse · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Have any of you had a similar problem closing your account?

    It happens to others companies like domainnic.com. They used my email address as account name and all account related information(change password, etc.) will be sent thru this email.

    Years later the email account originally used to register the domain is invalidated and I request to change the email address. Their reply is negative because they can't change the account name thus can't change my primary admin email address, and they refused to make change to their system so I'll have to make the change by other means.

    You can't expect too much for free services such like hotmail, but sometime even when you paid you may not recieve certain level of convenience you expect. Not matter it's a paid or free service, make sure it meets your expected level of customer services before you join. Just MHO.

  2. That explains by PD · · Score: 3, Funny

    why my dog keeps getting so much spam! I'm waiting for the credit card offers to arrive in the mail. Then, one day soon, he'll mysteriously find his way into the social security database. He'll have to do jury duty. Then the IRS will figure out that he hasn't ever paid taxes and come after him. Finally, he'll get drafted and have to fight in a war against terrorism (down with feral cats!)

    All because of a simple passport.net signup.

  3. Open another email by TheSHAD0W · · Score: 4, Informative

    I think what may be going on is your Passport account is tied to that email account, and is trying to send a cancellation confirmation or something.

    Try reactivating the old email account, and also make a new temporary account, say with Yahoo email. Then change the Passport email to the Yahoo account. THEN you ought to be able to shut down both Passport and that MS email account.

  4. My Useless Domain Name by MBCook · · Score: 4, Informative
    Years ago I got a domain name and I used it for a long time. Well all of a sudden one day the hosting company that I'd be using for years disappeared off the 'net and I needed to find a new host. Well I found one, but I had to get a new domain name. Why?
    • I no longer have the e-mail address I used when I got the origional domain name, and I can't get it back.
    • But to change anything on the domain name, I have to have that e-mail address or...
    • A password that was chosen by my hosting company (who's gone forever) and which I don't know. So the only option left is to...
    • Fax a form to the InterNIC or whatever name they're under today with proof that I'm the owner of the domain name in question. I fax them a form with drivers liscenses that prove I lived at the house the domain was registered to and my new address which is on file with another domain name. I did this, but it can take up to six months, so I'm left with two other options now...
    • Pay the $200 EXTORTION fee to have my application "expidited" (read: not lost forever). If I don't do this then I get to wait 6 months for the paper work to go though. Have I mentioned that I sent that damn form in 2 years ago? The only other thing I can do is...
    • Or I can get my hosting company to add the domain to my account and they'll take care of it all for me. Did I mention that this has some huge fee attached to it too?

    So am I getting screwed here or what? I know it's not exactly the same thing, but god what a terrible system. So I will fittingly end with something from the Drew Carey show that seems to fit things:

    Drew: Well that's it. The great circle of crap is complete.

    --
    Comment forecast: Bits of genius surrounded by a sea of mediocrity.
    1. Re:My Useless Domain Name by Profane+Motherfucker · · Score: 5, Funny

      Sounds like you're out $200. Here's the thing to do:

      1. Go to the bank. Withdraw $200. Get four fifties.
      2. Find a skank bar. Drink, for four nights beginning Tuesday, $50 worth of booze nightly. Even at a fairly pricey bar, $50 will get you wasted. Be sure to get properly belligerent drunk. Accost people. Fondle women. Get some phone numbers, bruises, and a split lip. It really doesn't hurt that bad. A bloody lip heals in about four days. Plus, even if you win a fight, it still hurts just as bad as losing. Do wear robust boots, however.
      3. On Saturday, when you're a hung-over pile, go gandi.net and register a new domain. It's about $12 yearly. Find some good web hosting. I found some for $5/month. Then, write about your drunken exploits.

      That's my MO. It's not bad.

  5. A little off, but bear with me... by trentfoley · · Score: 5, Funny
    I don't know if you were joking about your dog getting spam and credit offers, but I can tell you that I do have a computer (or rather a phone line) that gets all sorts of junk mail.

    Back in the bbs days, I got a separate phone line for computer use and have kept it since. Being the cheap bastard that I am, I didn't want to pay for an unlisted number. When asked what name to put in the phone book, I chose my favorite cartoon character at the time, and the name of my Netware 3.11 server at the time, "Stimpy", as in "...Sometimes your wealth of ignorance astounds me!"

    Over the many years, Stimpy was sent the obvious long distance service junk mails, as well as over 100 (I stopped counting) AOL floppies. The majority of our house's junk mail was addressed to me or my wife, but Stimpy was gaining ground. Along the way, someone decided that Stimpy must have been in the military. Stimpy has received mailings letting him know what Veteran benefits he is missing out on. Stimpy has declined offers of prequalified (not preapproved) credit cards for respected Veterans from many different banks.

    All from a simple phonebook listing. I've considered getting him a Social Security number and claiming him as an elderly dependent. My wife, a lawyer, thinks it is a bad idea...

  6. You have been assimilated. by n9hmg · · Score: 3, Funny

    Your uniqueness is being added to Microsoft's own. Resistance is futile.