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?"
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.
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.
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...