Archive for the 'Online Services' Category

Office 365: “Your data will be deleted in 1 day(s)” – Or how to scare the **** out of customers

Everyone knows a good psycho thriller always involves some kind of countdown. It really increases the suspense. Microsoft seem to have adopted a similar tactic, which is great at first glance. After all they are warning you that your DATA WILL BE DELETED. Definitely something I want to know about and constantly be reminded of if I don’t take action (no sarcasm here actually!).

Trial users of Office 365 will have received numerous emails from the time the trial ends until 30 days (+15 days grace period as far as I can see) after that telling them to buy a license. Ok, sounds reasonable. People may have signed up for the trial and forgotten about purchasing real licenses and nobody wants to lose their data. In my case I signed up for the trial, got hooked and bought the licenses probably a couple of days after that. So my license panel reads:

It was my understanding that as long as “Assigned” licenses <= “Valid” licenses then everything is fine. I could let those expired licenses simply expire.

Now I’m not easily irritated and assume that the Office 365 Portal simply forgot to do the math and just sends those warning whenever trial licenses are in your account. But an assumption won’t be enough for customers asking the same question, so let me reassure myself and them.

First of all I really appreciate that the warning email is not sent from a “noreply@microsoft.com” – it actually goes to msonlineservicesteam@microsoftonline.com. Awesome, that’s a +1 over Google Services (where asking questions per email is apparently a no-no).

Quickly fired off a reply asking what the warning will do in my scenario. This was back at the beginning of September. A couple of days ago I got the “7 day warning”. I again sent an email reminding them they had left my email unanswered and asking what to do. Still no reply. WTF? I did pay my subscription didn’t I?

I know there is a great forum (and I have received helpful information there before about technical issues) but this is a financial/licensing (and usually confidential - especially for customers) issue which I’m not going to post on a public forum – that’s why I am a paying customer and expect answers to questions like these via email. Sadly I don’t even know if my email was ignored, deleted or is still in progress, because I didn’t get any answer at all. Not even one of those kind automated emails thanking you for your email.

Dear Microsoft. Don’t be a faceless monster in the cloud and try to:

  • Answer emails (especially if I am paying and especially if “DATA WILL BE DELETED”)
  • Implement some form of ticketing so that I at least know my issue arrived and is being looked at by someone.
  • Or simply don’t send out warning emails if my data is not really in jeopardy.
All I can do at the moment is wait for tomorrow and hope our data is safe (and of course run a backup tonight).
UPDATE 2011-10-18
For anybody who finds this and is worried what really happens. The deadline went by and as I had suspected it was just an overanxious e-mailer and in reality as long as “purchased licenses” >= “assigned licenses” then you are fine. No data was lost, no customers were upset. Just a case of bad communication.

Office 365 does not allow more than 16 character passwords or “Why, why, why???”

Since my first article about a financial institution’s policy on password length I’ve encountered a couple of examples. All of which were not really worse than the one I had mentioned before but today I was happily signing up for Microsoft’s new online services offering and was prompted to change my password (n.b. I was in the trial). I whip out my Keypass, make an entry and get presented with the following:

 

Why oh why would you ever put a maximum length on the password field? Even if the database size is a concern (really?) would it make sense to bump the limit to something much longer like 100 or 200 characters. Even the default security setting for KeyPass (which I’m sure many people use) is longer than 16 characters.

I may be Microsoft-friendly and it won’t keep me from using the service, but come on Microsoft. Ask the guys who wrote the (ludicrously long) method: HashPasswordForStoringInConfigFile

 

 

XING: Poor statistics on pro accounts

I’ve been on Xing or should I rather say good-old-openBC since May 2004. The service has always been great and I used the free one up until about half a year ago, where I decided to give the pro version a go. I wanted to check it’s capabilities on all those pro features that you would need as a self-marketer. At first the search pops into mind which is greatly improved in the pro version, you can search just about anything. (Though I wish the free search was at least a bit better too… Images would be nice…).

Anyhow, having visited Tech-Ed I was interested in something saying “I have increased the visits to my profile by x amount”. I had looked for that feature, but they had removed it about half a year ago after a system update. So where does he get his info, well it seems that the newsletter you can opt-out of includes this information. Ok, this seem a fair practice for free accounts – get people to subscribe to your marketing newsletter to get access to the statistics. But as a prop I want to have these infos on the website, with a historic view and even better some nice graphs. If I want to market myself I need to correlate these statistics to my work.

Seeing as this feature was missing I decided to ask Xing Support for some help. The answer I got:

Thanks for your email. We don’t offer this at the moment, but may do so in the future.

Great guys. I’m a bit disappointed. I wonder if LinkedIn.com has such features for pro accounts? You may have been the first (where you really? Come to think of it, I don’t exactly know, but you where online early.) but you certainly won’t be the last business network.

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