Once upon a time, Paul Menzel <pmen...@molgen.mpg.de> said: > I guess it’s ignorance, and that nobody complains to them. Depending > on your jurisdiction you can report this case to the “data privacy > office”, and you can contact the data protection officer of the > offending company.
I hadn't thought about trying that route... but it's also like telling people they can track down spammers IMHO. It shouldn't be acceptable behavior. > (You could also try to reset the password, often sent to the > registered email address.) So for a few of these, I've considered that... but also think that in some jurisdictions someone could then try to come after me for accessing an account that wasn't mine. In the Delta Airlines case this week, there isn't even an account; it's a case of an employee getting a ticket for a family member and sending ticket messages (so I'm getting the family member messages - no Delta account to log in to). -- Chris Adams <c...@cmadams.net> _______________________________________________ mailop mailing list mailop@mailop.org https://list.mailop.org/listinfo/mailop