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My email got hacked and i dont know the password!
I can't remember my secret answer to my secret question. What can i do about that?
help me please!
my stolen email is husam-36@hotmail.com
thank you
I have been using Google's Gmail for quite some time now, in addition to my ISP's E-mail service, and have so far been very pleased. I do see alot more spam in Gmail, but it has been blocked 100%. The amount of storage is just unbelievable, although I am a little leary about security, but I have not been let down by any 'free' Google service yet! I for the most part agree that "nothing's really free", but I honestly think there are exceptions such as AVG Free Anti-virus, A-squared Free, Ccleaner, Comodo Firewall, etc. Of course you must be very careful, but I've found these programs far better than the services I'd been paying for (I prefer not to mention their names in all fairness, but they are some of the better rated}.
Posted by: Dave Markley at January 26, 2008 7:51 PMwhen my laptop boot i get this message c:window\system32\ne0ks.exe. how do i remove this error from my laptop . i am using windows home edition
Posted by: oduro at February 8, 2008 2:14 AMI hope this article was written in 2005. I have used free google apps to provide email to a very large company. I havent experienced any problems servicing my many users. As far as spam, please learn about SPF and open relay servers. I cant justify the cost of Microsoft exchange for the very extra value my users experience. This perceived value will only dissapear as google and yahoo make Office and Exchange obsolete in the next 5 years.
Posted by: Matt at February 11, 2008 10:34 PMI had never really made a decision about having a reliable email. When Yahoo made the Space available to store lots of contact information, I went for it. I thought now I can throw away every hard copy and access my contact information from anywhere in the world. Then one day all of my contacts with email and snail mail addresses and phone numbers and private information disappeared suddenly from Yahoo. Even the categories became blank. Boy, how I wished I had thought about a more reliable email service then and done something about it sooner.
Posted by: OLIVIA HILL at April 5, 2008 11:25 PMI am using hotmail because my service provider account had NO spam filter, and contrary to other reports, got more spam on that account than on yahoo or hotmail, which provided methods for handling junk.I would like to use my nac.net account since we pay for it but it is too difficult. How can I find a dial-up server in my area code?
Posted by: Aileen at April 26, 2008 11:21 AMEven if you keep your email for your friends only, there is still risk of the replicas and viagra sellers to get your email, don't be fooled by false security given by paid account, anyone who you give your email, however trustable he/she is may leak your email even without their knowledge. Their computer may be infected with an email harvesting spyware (especially for those who use Outlook or any other mail program). Once your email is registered to a spammer, it stays, and spammer have the tendency to share email list.
Posted by: Lie at June 19, 2008 7:20 AMEven if you keep your email for your friends only, there is still risk of the replicas and viagra sellers to get your email, don't be fooled by false security given by paid account, anyone who you give your email, however trustable he/she is may leak your email even without their knowledge. Their computer may be infected with an email harvesting spyware (especially for those who use Outlook or any other mail program). Once your email is registered to a spammer, it stays, and spammer have the tendency to share email list
Posted by: lovin thomas at July 31, 2008 5:45 AMI'd also never recommend to use an email address for which you pay a _monthly_ (or yearly, for that matter) fee. And I'd take Gmail off the non-recommended emails list as explained below.
While your comments are valid the thing is that in by 2008 people should understand that email _address_ doesn't really cost anything to provide.
But your identity does. It's awfully valuable. And that's why Hotmail, Yahoo, AOL -- and all those services that you _pay_ for for service don't want to let you 'own' i.e. have full control over your email address (i.e. allow you to forward your emails to your preferred service or access them w/ POP/IMAP for free).
So you say, ok: but I'm fine paying. And I say that the biggest reason that people don't change their email service provider, free or paid for, when someone else provides a better service is that they've given the address to so many. The email address is essentially your online identity and most of the providers keep you hostage because of that.
And here's where Gmail is very different. They offer free email forwarding - and POP & IMAP access. And it has by far the best spam filters of the tens that I've tested. But that's beside the point. The point is that others -- including those comcasts, verizons, etc -- keep your email and/or your online identity hostage while Gmail doesn't. Ok, some would say that they're still in beta and we _still_ don't know what it will become. I say, possible, but the company has committed quite strongly to these free-as-in-speech elements of Gmail.
So, I think Gmail is definitely good. (.. But not really all paid for emails are.)
You get the same freedom by buying your own domain. Cost: less than $10/_year_. And with that you own the whole address space of that domain.
And most domain hosts provide free email forwarding. And Google Apps even more. With them you can provide email accounts for your domain to hundreds of your friends. For free - and so that you and your friends have full control.
My choices: Gmail, own domain, Google Apps.
Don't let them keep you hostage - make you pay for "nothing".
Posted by: Jaakko H. at August 25, 2008 12:31 PMi make account hotmail in outlook express not find http:\\service msn
Posted by: Muryat at September 4, 2008 10:31 PMTo post a comment on "Are free email services worth it?", please return to that article's main page.