Microsoft sweeps out Hotmail accounts

By Stefanie Olsen, Special to ZDNet
22 March 2002 12:04 PM
Tags: hotmail, spam, accounts, junk
People using the free e-mail service are seeing their folders and in-boxes cleaned out as their junk-mail folders fill with pitches for a paid version of Hotmail.

In Microsoft's popular free e-mail service, messages are being swept out and bounced back to senders as the site urges members to upgrade to a premium version that costs US$19.95 a year, according to subscribers.

One Hotmail user, Arianna, said she signed on to her e-mail account last week to find the system had emptied out her in-box--including important messages about her upcoming wedding--but left her junk-mail folder full.

"It definitely felt like strong-arming, like 'See what can happen if you don't pay us,'" said Arianna, a community college professor.

Long the reigning free program for Web-based e-mail with more than 110 million users, Hotmail has made several policy changes to the service in the last nine months that add up to a big push for paid membership. Such moves could rebuild free e-mail services including Hotmail and Yahoo Mail as the next tollbooths for Net consumers, even though many Web surfers signed up for e-mail accounts early on thinking that they would be free for life.

More broadly, Microsoft is eager to increase adoption of its various Internet services including Hotmail and wallet software Passport as part of its .Net strategy--an overarching effort to connect all of its online properties and products using a common set of Internet technologies and Microsoft software.

Since Microsoft's US$400 million acquisition of Hotmail in January 1998, the company has maintained its heritage as a popular free online service despite dramatic changes in the Internet economy. But as Microsoft has started to introduce .Net--which also serves to push subscription revenues--the company is increasingly urging people to spend money with its services.

"It all has to do with the .Net strategy of driving as much adoption on the consumer side and eventually as much revenue as possible," said Matthew Berk, analyst at Internet research company Jupiter Media Metrix. "In addition to Hotmail, Microsoft is enforcing use of Passport." Passport and Hotmail accounts are linked by the same registration.

Ratcheting up the rules
Last fall, the company became strict with part-time Hotmail users by saying it would dump accounts of anyone who didn't log on at least once a month. This was a change from its previous 45-day policy.

Then in the summer, Hotmail introduced its first-ever fee of US$12.95 a year for additional mail storage over its free 2MB, which typically holds up to 200 pieces of e-mail without attachments. It increased the charge to US$19.95 in late December. The paid service allows subscribers to maintain an account without ever logging on. Hotmail has also told free subscribers that if their storage limit is exceeded, it will bounce incoming messages or mailboxes will be spontaneously emptied.

Meanwhile, the crush of unsolicited commercial e-mail, or spam, to many subscriber mailboxes is pushing the storage limits. Consumers who use Hotmail's spam filters, introduced last year, say they are still receiving an enormous amount of junk--enough to force regular visits just to delete spam so they can stay under the storage limit. Some consumers even suspect that Hotmail has unleashed additional spam to purposely overload mailboxes and drive subscriptions.

One Hotmail user said he received an e-mail from the service in the last month saying that if he exceeded the storage limit, his incoming messages will be blocked with no explanation to the sender.

"The day after that announcement, my junk-mail folder had suddenly been spammed with the same message at least a hundred times, putting me over the storage limit. This kind of spam never hit me before and has happened a few times since," said Hotmail user Steve Rowley.

Capping these changes, Hotmail in the last several months has sent regular messages promoting its premium account, with 10MB of storeroom for Hotmail and 30MB for storing files on MSN communities.

"It seems like every time I check, there's a message saying my file-size limit is being reached and I should upgrade," said Dave Crowley, a Hotmail user. "I could be wrong, but I think that's becoming a standard daily spam message."

Microsoft said that consumers will receive an alert when their in-box reaches 1.8MB, just near the limit. "Once the 2MB limit is reached users can read and delete e-mail, but e-mail being sent to the account will bounce back and the account holder will not be able to send mail until more space is created by deleting some of the e-mail or signing up for MSN Extra Storage," said a Microsoft representative.

The representative said that Hotmail regularly empties old e-mail for customers, first cleaning out trash folders then junk-mail folders. In-boxes are emptied third, then "personal" and "sent" folders. The representative said it is a mistake if an in-box is cleared out first.

Everyone's doing it
Microsoft isn't the only company on a campaign to drive subscriptions. Hotmail competitors including Terra Lycos and Yahoo are determined to make inroads to consumers' pocketbooks. For example, Yahoo said Thursday that it would start charging for an e-mail forwarding service. Yahoo also sends regular messages about exceeding storage limits and upgrading to paid services.

"To what extent is anyone capable of truly supporting the scale of (Hotmail and other popular e-mail communities) for free?" asked Jupiter's Berk. "It's a multiple-pronged strategy: Initially, you try to get as much usage as possible, and eventually you take the steps of charging for services."

For Microsoft in particular, Berk believes that by urging adoption of Hotmail and Passport, in the long term it will have better chances of pushing transactions through its .Net system. Hotmail is just one service among many that encourages consumer adoption of .Net-based services, he said, listing MSN Communities and bCentral.

To address some of the spam issues, Hotmail is in talks to start using additional filters from software company Brightmail, which provides spam protection to MSN's Internet access service. According to Brightmail, Microsoft is planning to start using the filters in the near term. The software giant would not comment on its plans.

Last July, Hotmail upgraded its spam filters to make them easier for consumers to manage. The filters let consumers block by senders' addresses or choose a range of settings for receiving junk mail. People can also set the service to only accept mail from certain domains.

Consumers can also tell Hotmail to regularly clear out the junk-mail folder every seven days or immediately dump mail that appears to be spam. But consumers say the filters have progressively proved ineffective.

Arianna said that because she's not on the computer every day, her spam intake is outpacing the seven-day janitor service. She said she has her filters set to "exclusive"--one of the strictest filter settings--and she still gets overloaded with junk.

Despite her long-time use of the service, Arianna said she's questioning her loyalty in light of the recent problems.

"The thing that's so frustrating is that it just wasn't ever that close (to the storage limit), and they deleted my in-box and not my junk box," she said. "MSN is all about money. This just stood out to me as a glaring example that they're more interested in seeing their advertisers connect with me."

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Talkback 8 comments

    What an absolute load of garba ...Anonymous -- 22/03/02

    What an absolute load of garbage !! Of course if one doesn't use the account regularly and hoards untold messages one gets emptied, so as to allow regular daily users goos access. I use Hotmail at least for times a day, read and save to My Documents or wherever and delete, or delete after reading and responding. I never get "emptied out" and have never any problems at all. Smart work practices are clearly the answer. To the University Professor wheingers: wake up and get a life ! Hotmail is HOT !!!

    I've had a Hotmail account for ...Anonymous -- 23/03/02

    I've had a Hotmail account for a year and still love it. I have found the filters to be quite effective, one or two spams slip through each day - so what. I visit the site at least twice a day and with regular pruning keep the Inbox down to two or three pages. MSN have assured users the basic service will remain free. I found the article is a load of hysterical crap.

    I've had a Hotmail account for ...Anonymous -- 23/03/02

    I've had a Hotmail account for a year and still love it. I have found the filters to be quite effective, one or two spams slip through each day - so what. I visit the site at least twice a day and with regular pruning keep the Inbox down to two or three pages. MSN have assured users the basic service will remain free. I found the article is a load of hysterical crap.

    I've had a Hotmail account for ...Anonymous -- 23/03/02

    I've had a Hotmail account for a year and still love it. I have found the filters to be quite effective, one or two spams slip through each day - so what. I visit the site at least twice a day and with regular pruning keep the Inbox down to two or three pages. MSN have assured users the basic service will remain free. I found the article is a load of hysterical crap.

    I've never had any problems wi ...Anonymous -- 25/03/02

    I've never had any problems with it but if MSN does can its free web-based email im certainly going to boycott it :)

    they make enough money as it is.

    I have been using Hotmail for ...Anonymous -- 26/03/02

    I have been using Hotmail for three years and I NEVER receive any junk/spam mail! I really don't know what other people are doing with their Hotmail accounts - who are they giving their Hotmail address to? It is well known that if you don't complete the Hotmail registration form carefully, you get automatically signed up to receive various MSN newsletters etc. But if you carefully read the small print and untick boxes as you go (as I did)..... Who else are people giving their Hotmail address to? Obviously if you sign up willy-nilly for things, you will end up getting junk e-mail, just as the same is true for postal mail. People just need to be a bit more discriminating!

    Its not all MS's fault - it can't be, otherwise I would not be able to tell my tale. The same goes for managing the Hotmail account. 2MB is a sizeable amount of free space to allocate to users, no complaints there at all. Do people not manage their accounts and delete old e-mails? I suspect they don't. They don't do it in Outlook Express - a recent example was of someone I know with over 200MB of old e-mails on their Hard Drive going back to 1999.

    The irresponsible and the lazy always like to pass the blame to someone else, it would seem.

    True, microsoft has squandered ...Anonymous -- 24/09/03

    True, microsoft has squandered all the goodwill hotmail had built up in the years before microsoft bought them out. I gave up on it. Sick of losing all my files and the endless junkmail. I use yahoo instead.

    Bill Gates is obviously broke. ...Anonymous -- 17/08/04

    Bill Gates is obviously broke. The mongrel just can't get enough. Well the bast**d won't be getting mine

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