Microsoft Releases Your Personal Hotmail Info!

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Greg_Hard writes "Microsoft Releases Your Personal Hotmail Info! If you have a Hotmail account - or if you've used Microsoft Passport - for more than a month, there's something you need to check.
Microsoft Releases Your Personal Hotmail Info

If you have a Hotmail account - or if you've used Microsoft Passport - for more than a month, there's something you need to check. Or, more accurately, uncheck. Quickly.

A small publication known as The Eastside Journal, based in Bellevue, Washington http://www.eastsidejournal.com/sited/story/html/92308 , reports that Microsoft has taken, uh, liberties with your confidential information.

A bit of history. Microsoft bought Hotmail in January 1998. It's still the number-one location for free email: log on to www.hotmail.com and you can send and receive email messages at no charge.

Almost 120,000,000 people use the system, worldwide. A couple of years ago, Microsoft hooked up Hotmail to its Passport system. Variously known as Microsoft Passport, Windows Passport, MSN Passport, and/or .NET Passport, all of the names refer to Microsoft's giant central database of customer information.

If you want to use Hotmail, you have to sign up for a Passport - and in so doing you're added to the Passport database. Microsoft Messenger requires a Passport, too. Windows XP nags mercilessly, offering all sorts of goodies to get you to divulge your name, address, age, phone number, and the like, as grist for the Passport maw.

If you signed up for Hotmail - or anything else that uses Passport - more than a couple of months ago, you may be in for a big surprise. It seems that Microsoft changed the rules while you weren't looking. Unilaterally, Microsoft may have granted itself permission to pass along your personal information to other companies that use Passport on their Web sites. The personal information includes your email address, your birthday, your country and zip code, your gender and occupation.

Has Microsoft taken liberties with your data? There's an easy way to check. Go into Hotmail. Click Options (to the right of the tab that says "Address Book"). Click Personal Profile (in the upper left corner). Scroll down to the bottom of the screen and see whether the boxes marked "Share my e-mail address" and "Share my other registration information" have been checked.

Those boxes didn't exist when I signed up for Hotmail, and chances are pretty good they didn't exist when you signed up for it, either. I certainly never gave Microsoft permission to hand out my email address - or my birthday, gender or occupation. I'd rather be dipped in oil. Yet both of those boxes on my personal profile were checked. I bet they're checked on your personal profile, too.

Details are still murky, but it looks like Microsoft added those two check boxes a couple of months ago, and did itself a big favor by checking both of them for all of the Passport holders at the time.

When did Microsoft implement this new policy? Hard to say. Details should be in the MS privacy statement, but I couldn't find anything. If you'd like to wade through Microsoft's privacy statement http://privacy.msn.com/default.asp#MSNMAIL , strap on your hip waders - it's 520 lines of dense legalese.
 
The way I look at it is that MS is providing a service that everyone wants and if they were to charge 4.99 a month everyone would whine and cry about having to pay for e-mails. So they sell your info to companies looking to sell things in order to pay for the service so that it can remain free.
Before you click that reply button to yadda yadda about how much money MS has, just remember that it has money because it provides a product that we all use (don't like it get a Mac and shut up)
Anyone that thinks that something is offered for nothing in return is either 10 years old, fooling themselves, or has no idea how the real world works. :rolleyes:
 
Well spoken, Tom. In fact I have numerous Macs at home but I'm forced to be on the Dark Side at work, so no, I won't shut up...
:D
Why on earth would it have occurred to any of you to trust Micro$oft? I'm not trying to be a jerk, but given their well-known and relentless method of operation, it seems to me a given that they would distribute anything you happened to give them with anybody who would pay for it.

I mean, look at all the ways they monitor your web use in a program that is supposedly an "integral part" of the Windows OS. "Integral" only because Micro$oft needs to have their dirty fingers and prying eyes everywhere they can!
:mad:
 
I didn't put in much detail and most of the crap is made up, only thing I suppose they can get is my IP (only important thing)
 
my hotmail account is for spam... i don't really care, but it's good to know.
 
I've been getting unbelievable amounts of spam in the last few weeks. Lately it's been almost 100 a day sometimes, and 2 days ago, I recieved 380 emails from the same address. I'm sure I was sent even more than that, but "luckily" my hotmail account was full :rolleyes:
 
Holy crow! And I thought I was getting bombarded when SirCam was running around!

380 from one address? That's insane...
 
Yeah, I can understand why they did it. Definitely good to know. It seemed to me that recently the amount of SPAM I was receiving had increased - could be from this.
 
Your welcome guys. I happened to see that on another board and I immediately unchecked those. Now I know why I was gettin hammered with spam.
 
I know why I get some spam, and it's not because of those checked profile squares. It's because of all of the porn sites I give my e-mail addy to...:p j/k I've never recieved any spam in any of my Hotmail accounts, and those profile squares are both checked. The only e-mails I get, that aren't from my friends or people I know, are from Hotmail themselves.
 
yah, I had hotmail a couple of years ago. It was a whole lot of spam. Oh well, I wont be going back....but I didnt have plans to anyway.
 
Heh heh... being a faithful Mac user, I could never trust Microsoft anyway... :thumbsdow
 
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