Charter Accidentally Wipes 14K Email Accounts
dacut writes with the sad news that Charter Communications, which provides cable and Internet access to 2.6 million customers, accidentally and irretrievably wiped out 14,000 active email accounts while trying to clear out unused accounts. They're providing a $50 credit to each affected customer, which seems a paltry sum for anyone who was less than diligent about backing up their email — though those who relied on Charter's webmail interface had no easy way to accomplish backups. From the article: "There is no way to retrieve the messages, photos and other attachments that were erased from inboxes and archive folders across the country on Monday, said Anita Lamont, a spokeswoman for the suburban St. Louis-based company. 'We really are sincerely sorry for having had this happen and do apologize to all those folks who were affected by the error,' Lamont said Thursday when the company announced the gaffe."
I know these kinds of things aren't supposed to happen, but sometimes they do. The worst part for the company itself is not the backlash they receive...it's the fact that nothing they do and nothing they say will fix it.
It's one thing if you have angry customers over something you have control over. It's another thing entirely if your customers are angry at you AND there isn't a single solitary thing you can do. That said, I hope that they are more careful in the future...
Living With a Nerd
Back in the olden days when everyone POP'd their email and disk quotas on the mail server were in the 5-10 MB range, most ISPs didn't bother to back up email for very long because it was expensive and mostly pointless. These days, however, with everyone pushing huge disk quotas and webmail interfaces, the ISPs must be aware that most people will be keeping their email on the server for long periods of time. If this service were free, I might be able to excuse some shoddy backup practices, but in the case of an ISP your mail service is part of the overall service that you're paying for.
So, either Charter doesn't back up email very well, or their process to "clear out old accounts" involves actually deleting all of the backups of those accounts as well. I already addressed the issue with the former scenario, but if it's the latter, I'd have to say that's a pretty nasty practice too. Any time you clear out old and "unused" data, you have to assume that you're likely to accidentally hit some false positives, which is one of the reasons we have backups in the first place.
I see no reason why bytes are any more "volatile" in an IMAP file than anywhere else.
What I'm listening to now on Pandora...
You have got to be kidding me. I was going to moderate this as idiocy, but I decided to elaborate with a response instead.
One might be able to reach a person at Charter, but a helpful person? Not on your life. You speak about behemoth corporations, and Charter embodies the worst of corporate bureaucracy. They are total idiots, the left hand doesn't talk to the right hand, and their prices are unreasonable. And yes, I dumped them as soon as I could so I don't have to deal with them any more. But not once did I deal with a helpful person.
And deleting 14,000 email accounts just shows the heights of stupidity this company has achieved.
I'm Peggy.