This blog is no longer active

Did you notice? We haven’t posted anything new here for awhile. We’ve officially stopped maintaining this blog.

To get the inside story from the people who build Windows Live, check out the Inside Windows Live blog, where Windows Live engineers and executives blog about all the Windows Live services, how they’re built, and how we decide what to add or improve as we build the latest new features.  

If you need technical help with anything from Windows Live, try the Windows Live Solution Center.

For tips and updates about cool things you can do with Windows Live, check out the Hotmail and Messenger pages on Facebook. You can also follow us on Twitter at www.twitter.com/windowslive.

Thanks for your support!

The Windows Live team

How to get Windows Live Messenger on your mobile phone

If you use Windows Live™ Messenger at home, work, or school, and if you’ve ever wondered how great it would be to instant message with friends and colleagues even when you’re away from your PC, there’s good news. Messenger is now available on most mobile devices, and can be activated or downloaded for free* from Microsoft.

Messenger for mobile is easy to use and similar to Messenger on your PC. You can quickly log-in, see who’s online, begin a conversation, and even send emoticons, pictures, and files.

We say ‘activated’ as well as ‘downloaded’ because many new phones, including Windows® Phone, come with a Messenger client pre-installed. For phones that don’t have Messenger pre-installed, a fast, simple download is all it usually takes to get started.

If you’re not sure if you have Messenger on your phone, or aren’t sure how to download it, there’s help! Simply open your phone’s browser and visit http://m.windowsliveformobile.com. The site will determine your country and device model, and will push either a link to your phone or it will automatically begin the installation process.

Here’s a little more information about specific devices, so you can better understand if Messenger is on your phone or how to get it.

Blackberry: Most devices have a pre-installed. If not, you can download the Messenger client from the App World, the online store for BlackBerry smartphones.

Windows Mobile: Windows Live client is either pre-installed or can be downloaded from Windows Marketplace.

iPhone: No client is available currently. Please check back at a later time for more details.

Android: Client comes pre-installed for T-Mobile users in the US.

For all other device models, the client may be pre-installed. Check with your mobile operator or simply open your phone’s browser and visit http://m.windowsliveformobile.com. Once you install Messenger, you’ll love being able to instantly connected with your contacts from almost anywhere.

* Your mobile provider may charge a fee for using Messenger on your phone. Check your data plan.

Enjoy,

– Windows Live Messenger team

An engineering blog for Windows Live

Chris Jones, the Corporate Vice President for Windows Live, recently launched a new engineering blog called Inside Windows Live. The new blog provides a place for engineers and others who work on Windows Live to share insight into what it takes to build and maintain the Windows Live products and services, how they’re distributed and used worldwide, as well as some of the reasoning behind how and why we’ve built things in particular ways. It is written for an audience of software engineers, web industry folks, and anyone else who want to dig a little deeper into the technical details of our products.

There are a few initial posts on this blog already. The introductory post from Chris Jones provides a good summary of what the new blog is about. There is also some in-depth insight on Hotmail history as well as architecture and the challenges of managing spam and phishing on an e-mail service of this magnitude. Most recently, our security specialist goes in-depth about how we work behind the scenes to keep phishing mail out of your Hotmail inbox.

Keep checking back here for interesting tips, updates and other essential news and info about Windows Live, and for links to the latest stuff on the Inside Windows Live blog. You can subscribe to the Inside Windows Live RSS feed here.

Thanks,

– The Windows Live team

Be more productive with Hotmail in 2010!

Did you know that you can do mail faster and easier with features that Hotmail recently added to allow for more productivity with e-mail?

Here are seven ways to be more productive that were added in recent months:

(1) Auto-complete.

Hotmail auto-completes as you type e-mail addresses in the “To:” line when you’re composing a new message. We’ve made Hotmail smarter so that contacts you’ve recently e-mailed will appear closer to the top of the auto-complete list.  For example, if you have 10 Michaels in your address book, but always e-mail Michael Z, he will appear at the top of the list.

(2) Contact picker.

Alternatively, we realize that some prefer to use the contact picker to add recipients to messages. We’ve improved this feature, too. When you click on the “To:” button in Hotmail while composing a message, Hotmail will show your contact list as it did before, and with the new improvements, more recent contacts will appear higher in the list to help you more efficiently find and add e-mail addresses to your messages. 

(3) Don’t Delete; Just Edit. 

Mistype an e-mail address?  No need to delete it; you can now edit the addresses by clicking on the “edit” icon next to the e-mail address.

(4) Auto-save.

As you draft your e-mail message, Hotmail will automatically save your message to the drafts folder periodically. This way, if you accidentally navigated away from the page before you finish your message, you won’t have to start from scratch again.

(5) Download all attachments together.

To make receiving multiple attachments easier for you in Hotmail, we’ve added the ability to down download all attached files as a Zip file so you won’t have to take the time to download each attachment one-by-one.

(6) Quickly reach out to your IM friends/colleagues from within Hotmail.

In three simple steps, you can begin chatting with your friends:

a. Sign-in via the Messenger link on top right corner of your inbox

b. Click “view online contacts” to see your buddy list

c. Click on contact to start a chat!

As an added bonus, Hotmail will automatically refresh your inbox (message list and folder count) when new e-mail arrives while you’re signed into web-based IM!

(7) Keyboard shortcuts.

You can save you time when you use Windows Live Hotmail, so we’ve now added more to the list. Give these a try!

To
Press
Delete a message
Delete
Create a new message
Ctrl+N
Send a message
Ctrl+Enter
Open a message
Ctrl+Shift+O
Print a message
Ctrl+Shift+P
Reply to a message
Ctrl+R
Reply all to a message
Ctrl+Shift+R
Forward a message
Ctrl+Shift+F
Save a draft message
Ctrl+S
Mark a message as junk
Ctrl+Shift+J
Mark a message as read
Ctrl+Q
Mark a message as unread
Ctrl+U
Move to a folder
Ctrl+Shift+V
Open the next message
Ctrl+.
Open the previous message
Ctrl+,
Close a message
Esc
Search your e-mail messages
/
Check spelling
F7
Select all
S then A
Deselect all
S then N
Go to the inbox
G then I
Go to your People page
G then P
Go to your Calendar
G then C
Go to Messenger (this will open Windows Live Messenger from within Hotmail)
G then M
Go to your Home page
G then H
Go to your Drafts folder
F then D
Go to your Sent folder
F then S

If you prefer Gmail or Yahoo! Mail’s shortcuts, you can change your setting to use those instead (Click on the Options drop-down, then More options. In the “Customize your mail” section, click on Change keyboard shortcuts).

 

We hope these updates will help you e-mail more efficiently!

– The Windows Live Hotmail Team

 

 

Lots and lots of storage

There’s a lot of free storage for people using Windows Live these days. 

In Dallas, TX, there is a Hotmail user named Ryan who uses 23GB of e-mail storage, for free.  There’s Martin in Germany, who uses 21GB, and Yara in Brazil, who uses 19GB for free.  And, as these users and the millions more like them who continue to use e-mail to share photos and communicate with friends need more space, Windows Live keeps giving them all they need. Free.

Beyond e-mail, we are building the best place for your photos and documents on the web, powered by tons of free and secure storage with Windows Live SkyDrive.  25 GB to be exact. This means you can store just about as many documents as you’d like, save full resolution photos, and easily create photo albums, all online where they’re safe, available anywhere, and more convenient to share with friends. 

Even now our users are uploading 4 million photos each day, and we’re continuing to make this easier with features like Photomail in the Windows Live Mail program, which automatically converts the photos you send as an e-mail attachment into an online photo album for future access and easy sharing.  Also, with the new Office 2010 Beta you’ll be able to save a document that’s on your PC directly to your SkyDrive storage space.  So keep communicating, sharing, and creating online, and we’ll keep building the tools and providing the free storage you need for a great experience.

– The Windows Live team

 

Resolve to get organized in 2010

It’s the time to year to make—and keep—resolutions. But rather than saving the world or sticking to an impossible diet, we suggest practical stuff. Like getting organized. Staying in touch. Doing everyday tasks just a little bit faster. Little things like these can add up to big changes.

Who knows, maybe 2010 will be the year you finally accomplish that big goal, or become the outstanding friend/kid/partner/date/employee you always wanted to be. The world awaits your glorious transformation!

Try these fun and easy ways to enhance your life:

Resolution 1: Organize your schedule

Still using a calendar taped to your fridge? Double-booking yourself? You can make sure you don’t miss an important event by tracking all your appointments on the web on your Windows Live™ Calendar, and then connecting your Windows Live Calendar to your Microsoft® Office Outlook® calendar. That way you can manage all your events in one convenient place, and take control of your time. All those people you’ve left hanging will appreciate it.

Resolution 2: Stay in touch more often

Stop being a bad friend! It’s easier than ever to connect with anyone—friends, acquaintances, mom, dad, friends, cousins, neighbors, you name it—from almost anywhere, using Windows Live Messenger on your mobile device. Similar to how it works on your PC, Messenger works great with most phones. In fact, it could be on your phone already, you may just have to turn it on. See how.

Resolution 3: Find stuff quickly

Everybody hates losing things, which is one reason why Windows® 7 is so great. You never have to worry about finding files and programs on your PC thanks to cool new features like Jump Lists and Taskbar. Windows 7 helps you save time and steps, making your PC easier to use.

Resolution 4: Take a few shortcuts

And save time! New features in Windows Live Hotmail® make e-mailing faster and better. Now you can download more than one attachment at once. And use your keyboard to quickly navigate your e-mail. Plus with auto-save, you won’t risk losing messages before you send them. Heck, you don’t even have to refresh your inbox anymore, since auto-refresh will now display your most recent messages.

Get organized and have a great 2010!

– The Windows Live Team

Movie Maker: YouTube publishing issue now resolved

It came to our attention late last week that a change was made on YouTube.com resulting in a failure to publish movies directly from Windows Live Movie Maker.  The change was minor and behind-the-scenes, but unfortunately it did affect Movie Maker and the way it authenticates with the YouTube service for a set of our users.  This change wasn’t specific to Movie Maker – some other applications and websites that connect to YouTube were also affected.

Once users let us know, we alerted the YouTube team who promptly rolled out an update to the service, restoring the ability to publish from Movie Maker.  At this time, Movie Maker users shouldn’t have difficulty publishing directly to YouTube.  Thanks to the YouTube team for being great partners and turning this around so quickly!

Those of you on the Windows Live Answers site were also very helpful in raising this problem to our attention.  This is exactly what we had hoped people would use the new forums for – so thanks to everyone who helped raise this issue!

– The Windows Live Movie Maker team

Season’s Greetings!! : Video Holiday cards using Movie Maker

This year instead of sending out greeting cards or form letters typical of the holiday season, tell the story of 2009 in pictures and videos by sending a Video Holiday Card made with Windows Live Movie Maker!

In this post, we’ll give you the step by step instructions to make fun video holiday cards using those photos and videos you captured in 2009. As an added bonus, the Windows Live Movie Maker team is giving you a holiday theme package that includes music and title slides to spruce up your video cards. Let’s get started!

Before you begin, you’ll need a couple things:

– Windows Live Movie Maker – install it for FREE from download.live.com if you haven’t already

– Your own photos and/or videos 

– Optional (but fun): Video Holiday Card Package, including 13 images to use for title and credits pages and six songs to make your movie more festive – DOWNLOAD HERE and save it to your PC. Here’s a sneak peak of the images you will get in the package:

And you can “preview” one of of the songs (“Piano medley”) by clicking here:

 http://cid-2f7eb29b42641d59.skydrive.live.com/embedicon.aspx/Public/WindowsLiveWriterplug-ins/PianoMedley.mp3

CREATING YOUR VIDEO HOLIDAY CARD

1. First, open Windows Live Movie Maker. To add your content click anywhere in the blank space on the right or click the Add Videos and Photos button in the Home tab.

2. Choose the 8-12 photos you would like to use in your video holiday card. Why 8-12? Because when combined with any one of the 30-second long music clips we’ve provided in the Holiday Package, each picture is shown for a nice length of time. But it’s up to you how many photos or videos to include, just make sure you add 8-12 photos for every 30-seconds of music. You can select all (CTRL+A) or a group of content by holding down the CTRL key when clicking on photos and videos. When 8-12 photos and videos are selected, click Open.

3. If you haven’t already downloaded the Video Holiday Card Package, do so by clicking here. Once downloaded, unzip the file. Add a title and credit slides from the Holiday Package by clicking on the Add Videos and Photos button. Now, navigate to the place you put the Video Holiday Card Package. Click on Titles and Credits folder. You can either choose to add a title slide with “Seasons Greetings” already on it and a blank credits slide for the end, or pick two credit slides that are blank to add your own message, and click Open. 

4. Now that your title and credit slides have been added, move the title slide to the very beginning of the movie by clicking and dragging it to the first spot. Similarly, move the credit slide to the end of the movie if it’s not there already. This will frame up the beginning and end of your video card.

 

AUTO MOVIE  

5. On the Home tab, click Auto Movie. This will automatically add transitions and effects, and ask you to select soundtrack for your movie. In the Video Holiday Card Package, there are six song selections to choose from. Pick one and click Open. Depending on the amount of content and the song you picked, you might see a dialog box that says ‘Can’t fit photos to the music’. If you see that, don’t panic. Click OK. This will be fixed momentarily. If you don’t see ‘Can’t fit photos to the music’, the next step will still apply. 

6. Since a holiday title slide has already been added, delete the black slide at the beginning of your movie. Next, fit your content to the music by selecting Fit to Music in the Home tab. If you still get the ‘Can’t fit photos to the music’ dialog box, check to see if you have less than 12 photos. If you have video clips in your holiday card, check to make sure to check if the video clips are short. You can use the Trim Tool in the Video Tools tab to trim the clips to shorter lengths if needed. Or add a second song to create a longer holiday video.

CREDITS

7. The credits screen puts the finishing touches on your holiday card. Thanks to Auto Movie, the hard work is already done. All that’s left to do is move the start of the text box under the credit slide from the last slide (the black credit slide) to the slide just before it (the holiday package credit slide).

 

8. Finally, let’s edit the text that was just moved. Double click on the text box below the credit slide to pull up the text editor. It’s up to you what you want to write here, for example:

Happy Holidays from

the [insert family name here]

When you’ve added your text, increase the font size by clicking the A^ button in the ribbon to make it easy to read on the screen.

 

9. You’re done! Click play to see your video.

Want to customize your video further?

If you want to add captions to any of the photos or videos in your holiday card, it’s very simple with Movie Maker. Just click on the photo or video you want to add a caption to, in the Home tab click Caption. A text box will appear with the [Enter text here] highlighted, simply type in the caption. Adjust the font, add a text effect, even move it around the screen. It’s all up to you. If you mess up, click the back arrow above the Home tab to ‘undo’ anything you just did.

 

So there you have it, Video Holiday Cards made easy with Windows Live Movie Maker. Happy Holidays and Seasons Greetings

– the Windows Live Movie Maker team

New Office 2010 beta works with Windows Live

In September, we announced the Tech Preview of the Office Web Apps on Windows Live. As you may know, the Office Web Apps on Windows Live are free online companions to applications like Microsoft Word, Excel and PowerPoint that let you access, edit and share Microsoft Office documents from virtually anywhere.

While the Office Web Apps on Windows Live remain in Technical Preview (meaning they have don’t have all of the features of the final version*), today Microsoft is announcing the beta release of Office 2010 for Windows.

So what does this mean for you as a Windows Live user?

If you are already in the Office Web Apps Tech Preview, you get to experience much more of Office 2010 by downloading the beta and using it with Windows Live (see below).

If you are not in the Tech Preview, you can still join by downloading the Office 2010 beta and following the instructions at the end of the installation. If you don’t want to try the Office beta, you can still sign up for Office Web Apps Technical Preview in the US and Japan by clicking here.

What can you do with Office 2010 and Windows Live? Here are a couple examples:

Work and collaborate as you choose

Let’s say a friend shares a PowerPoint presentation with you on SkyDrive. With the Office Web Apps and SkyDrive, you can view and make quick edits to the presentation and share it right back using SkyDrive – all in a browser without Office installed. But let’s say you want to do more advanced editing – like adding a video. With Office 2010 installed, you can click “Open in PowerPoint” from your browser and continue in PowerPoint 2010 from where you left off. When you are done, you can save your presentation back to SkyDrive by just clicking “Save” and your friend will have access to the latest version.  

You can also create Office documents in Word, PowerPoint and Excel 2010 and use the new “Save to SkyDrive” feature in the Office File / Share menu to save the document directly to SkyDrive.  

In either case, you can be assured that your document’s formatting will have high fidelity.

Broadcast your PowerPoint presentation over the web

Imagine that you have created a PowerPoint presentation for a recent school field trip filled with photos, SmartArt and descriptions. Now you want to share it with your grandparents in another city – ideally clicking through the presentation at your own pace while speaking over the phone. With PowerPoint 2010 and a Windows Live ID, you can easily broadcast your presentation to your grandparents (or anyone) from within PowerPoint by clicking ”Slide Show” and “Broadcast Slide Show” from the ribbon (simpler than using the File menu). All your audience needs is a web browser*. They don’t need PowerPoint and they don’t even need to sign in!

 

 

For additional details on Office 2010, please visit the Office website.

Thanks,

Windows Live SkyDrive team

*During the Office Web Apps Tech Preview, OneNote Web App and certain features such as creating or editing a document in Word Web App are not available. Also, saving to SkyDrive from within OneNote 2010 is not supported. Please visit the Office website for additional details including browser compatibility information.

 

Phishing: a look inside

Phishing – what it is, and how it relates to your webmail credentials

Recently, the webmail industry experienced what was believed to be a phishing incident where several thousands of credentials from Gmail, Yahoo and Hotmail accounts were exposed on a third-party site.

For those who are wondering exactly what phishing is, and how it relates to general spam: phishing  is a criminally fraudulent attempt to acquire sensitive information such as usernames, passwords and credit card details by masquerading as a trustworthy person or institution in e-mail or on a website. These credentials are used for identity theft, financial transactions and other potentially harmful activities. While “spam” refers to being targeted with unwanted emails in general (eg the common “Viagra ads”), phishing refers to attempts to obtain your webmail credentials and other identity with fraudulent intent. And unfortunately, it isn’t anything new.

But thanks to coordinated efforts across the tech industry, and partnerships between industry players who are a part of the Anti-Phishing working group, over the years most web services, users and other applications have become smarter at spotting tricks like link manipulation, phone phishing, and forged websites. Cybercriminals have adapted to improved vigilance by focusing on the consumers as easier targets than battling technology.

Unfortunately, even technologically unsophisticated attacks can be successful because people traditionally underestimate the value of their online identities, and the gates that this information can open.

In most cases, this type of phishing attack is carried out by sending a simple e-mail that appears to be from someone you know. It might appear to be from the customer support department of Hotmail or another webmail provider, or it may even appear to come from a friend of yours (most likely, the message went to their entire contact list) and asks you to provide the credentials for your webmail service or it instructs you to click a link. Probably every one of us has seen an attack like this by now!

—–

Some of the most common types of phishing attacks

1. Attacks that rely on forging identities. In one of the most common types of attacks, the attackers change the name that is associated with an email address to a trusted, familiar name, like for example, “Windows Live Customer Support” or "Bank of America," even though their e-mail address still is "yourfriendlyspammer@live.com". If you’re not paying attention, it can be easy to mistake a message like this for a genuine request from Windows Live or your bank.

2. Attacks that use stolen accounts. In a variant of phishing, the attacker uses a previously compromised user account to send a link to everyone in the contact list for that account. If you unknowingly click the link, you land on a spam, phishing, or malware download site. As you can imagine, an e-mail you get from a friend’s account significantly increases the credibility of that message, and increases the likelihood of a successful attack. So, watch out for odd or uncharacteristic e-mails that comes from a friend’s account.

3. Attacks that ask you to provide credentials via phone. In a typical phone phishing scam, the scammer may direct you to call a customer support phone number, claiming that your account will be closed or other problems will occur if you don’t call the number. A person or an audio response unit waits to take your account number, personal identification number, password, or other valuable personal data.

4. Attacks via forged websites. Many phishing attacks will convince you to trust them by including official-looking logos or other identifying information taken directly from legitimate websites. A common trick is to create a web address that resembles the name of a well-known company but is slightly altered by adding, omitting, or transposing letters. For example, the address "www.microsoft.com" could appear instead as: “www.micosoft.com” OR “www.mircosoft.com” OR “www.verify-microsoft.com”

5. Attacks using social engineering. Sometimes a scammer will include convincing details about your personal life that they found on your social networking pages. It is easy for a user to think that they are getting an email from a friend wanting to reconnect and may inadvertently provide personal information.

Once the attackers have your credentials they typically use the account for various things:

· They can use your account to send more phishing or spam messages. These could go out to people on your contact list. The response rates to campaigns using stolen e-mail accounts to send the messages are far superior to traditional campaigns because of the inherent trust your contacts have for e-mail with your name on it. Or, your email ID could be used for broader spamming, since this allows them to counter abuse detection technology for a while.

· They can sell or use information from other accounts that you’ve linked to the stolen e-mail account. If you’ve used the same password for other financial services, merchant sites, and more, the impact could be very far reaching.

· They can sell it. The resale value of a legitimate web mail account like yours is $2 a pop on the black market—twice the amount they can get for a credit card.

—–

How Microsoft helps protect you from these attacks

From a technology perspective, because so much phishing comes as spam (unsolicited e-mail, which may or may not contain phishing), our Hotmail spam filter, called SmartScreen, blocks over 4 billion unwanted e-mail messages per day by distinguishing between legitimate e-mail and spam. To put these numbers in perspective, let us assume on one day our filters were less effective on 0.01% of the blocked spam that is phishing. This would result in about 400,000 additional phishing messages getting through to peoples’ inboxes that day. And if the response rates for these phishing attempts were anywhere close to what happened in this recent Facebook incident, then about 32,000 people would be victimized by these phishing scams, during that one day. While not all of the spam that comes through Hotmail spam filters is phishing, and the actual number of users impacted per day is quite a bit lower than it would be without spam filters, these numbers illustrate the magnitude of the problem faced by our e-mail services every single day.

We also offer (as do many other online services) various layers of protection to detect attempts at stealing user credentials. For example, after x number of efforts to log in, we require additional authentication before providing a new password. This prevents guessing of passwords by anybody other than the owner of the account. This method works well, generally, because it is not suitable for any large scale attacks but is not infalliable. Guessing can work particularly effectively with systems that employ self-service password reset. For example, in September 2008, the Yahoo e-mail account of Governor of Alaska and Vice President of the United States nominee Sarah Palin was accessed without authorization by someone who was able to research answers to two of her security questions, her zip code and date of birth and was able to guess the third, where she met her husband.

Beyond SmartScreen, there are complementary technologies that are part of your browser like the Microsoft Smartscreen Filter which is free with Internet Explorer 8, which can help protect you from phishing attacks by identifying suspicious or confirmed phishing sites, and warning you before you open the page. We have implemented Extended Validation certificates and Windows Live sign-in assistant to ensure the safety of your login credentials. Plus, always remember that Microsoft will only ask for your Windows Live ID credential pair on login.live.com – nowhere else!

In general, it is a good idea to download the latest Windows updates and keep your third-party security applications up to date as well, to keep your PC safe.

Microsoft also works with law enforcement very closely. Microsoft has supported 191 enforcement actions against phishers worldwide.  Microsoft has filed civil lawsuits and has made referrals and provides support for civil and criminal actions filed by international government and law enforcement agencies.

—–

Protect yourself: Tips on recognizing phishing attacks

But no amount of technology can substitute for an alert user. Because we realize that the key is making you aware, we make significant investments every year in user education and other ways of helping to make you aware of how to combat these attacks.

One thing you’ll notice in Hotmail is that we provide several visual cues to help you detect and prevent problems. Going back to the first example we used, you can see that the safety bar at the top of the message indicates that the content might be unsafe.

We also make an effort to warn you when you may not know the sender:

Aside from the few cases when you communicate with a contact or another service for the first time, most mail you receive comes from known senders, that is, someone in your contact list or on your safe list. An unknown sender is a very important clue, telling you to use caution before interacting with the message or the sender.

You should also always look carefully at the "From" address:

The initial name shown in bold can be misleading; look for the e-mail address that is associated with it: yourfriendlyspammer@live.com (or more typically, you’ll see random strings of letters and numbers in an e-mail address, like abcxxxx123@live.com).

Pay close attention before giving valuable information away to an e-mail address like this. Note that sometimes the address itself has been disguised to look legitimate, but when you click Reply, look at the destination address. Is it the same address as the one that sent the e-mail? If different, is it another suspiciously spam-like address?

You can find more cues in the message itself. Look for claims that are outlandish (for example, that you just won money in a lottery in another country!) or things that just make no common sense.

Microsoft will never ask you to verify your password or to provide it to us via e-mail. I just can’t reinforce this enough! We would never, ever ask for this information, period. The only time you should enter your password is on an official Windows Live ID sign-in page. So no matter why they say they need such information, please never provide your credentials over e-mail, in IM, or on a forum. Sometimes the justification provided can look downright silly, for example:

Really! Would we be running the largest email service on the planet if we had "congestion problems" that prevented us from being able to host your account anymore? And if we needed you to confirm your account, we would ask you to sign in to the service, not have you send us an e-mail containing your password.

The cases that are harder to detect are the ones where one of your friends’ accounts has been compromised and the attacker is now hiding behind your friend’s identity. That scenario also makes it difficult for the e-mail service to give you many visual cues to alert you, because to our spam filters, the message looks like part of an established, trusted relationship between the receiver and the sender. In these cases, be on the lookout for outlandish claims. Does the message sound like something your friend wouldn’t usually say? If anything looks odd or uncharacteristic of your friend, the safe thing is to call up your friend and ask them (rather than replying to the sender, who may not really be your friend). You might indeed be helping your friend by letting them know that somebody has taken over their account.

—–

Here’s how YOU can help Microsoft fight phishing

Reporting spam and phishing messages helps Microsoft detect and prevent this and future attacks from making it to users inboxes. Even if this is from a friend of yours please do report because the intent is not to penalize the compromised sender but to protect the user base. The following graphic demonstrates how to report:

—-

What to do if you become the victim of a phishing attack

Let’s say you did your best, the technology did its best, and you still find that your credentials were compromised one way or the other. It happens to best of us – don’t panic.

Follow the steps outlined here to reclaim your account, and then take appropriate steps to ensure the safety of your other e-mail accounts, banking, credit card information, etc.

Hopefully, these tips will make your online experience safer. Protecting users is our number one goal and with educated users on our side, the ecosystem is better equipped to tackle challenges like spam and phishing.

Best,

Krish Vitaldevara
Windows Live Hotmail team