This probably also effected German users. On Sep 30, 2014 6:32 PM, "Alexander Harrowell" <a.harrow...@gmail.com> wrote:
> Related oddness: if you're British and a GMail user, you either got a > gmail.com username before the lawsuit, or you got a googlemail.com > between the lawsuit and the point when Google and the owner of the > "gmail" trademark settled, or then you got a gmail.com again. > > Google chose to alias googlemail.com and gmail.com addresses so as to > minimise the mess, but this doesn't stop people who have > googlemail.com entering gmail.com (or vice versa) when they set up an > account on www.somewebsi.te, because they are conditioned to use > gmail.com/googlemail.com interchangeably, and then being baffled as to > why firstname.lastn...@googlemail.com (or vice versa)/password1234 > doesn't work, because googlemail==gmail and anyway my address is > really firstname.lastn...@gmail.com (or googlemail) - look, I get > email on it, it must be the right one :-) > > > > On Tue, Sep 30, 2014 at 12:17 AM, Jeff Woolsey <j...@jlw.com> wrote: > > On 09/29/14 10:06, Nicolai wrote: > >> > >> Most likely reason: gmail is so common that someone mistypes > >> johnsm...@example.com as johnsm...@gmail.com, not paying attention to > what > >> they're doing. It happens. > > > > > > More likely, I think, is that newbies think that email addresses already > > exist for everyone on the planet at firstl...@gmail.com, and they just > give > > that when asked (maybe they think it's throwaway and never actually > expect > > to get any email there). I'm in the same boat. It doesn't bother me > all > > that much because gmail is not my primary mail service. I use it to > store > > big stuff that's clogging the mail service I do pay for. In fact, it > can be > > entertaining, as I get usernames and passwords for sites that this guy > > signed up for. He's also a poker player and has recently tried to > enroll at > > an art college. The latter I could reply to and explain that their > > prospective student is an idiot and should not be accepted, but that's > what > > will happen anyway if I don't say anything. > > > > -- > > Jeff Woolsey {woolsey,jlw}@{jlw,jxh}.com first.last@{gmail,jlw}.com > > Spum bad keming. > > Nature abhors a straight antenna, a clean lens, and unused storage > capacity. > > "Delete! Delete! OK!" -Dr. Bronner on disk space management > > "Card sorting, Joel." -me, re Solitaire > > >