Microsoft Corp. on Monday will start charging for a Hotmail feature that allows users of the Web-based e-mail service to access
their e-mail using the Outlook e-mail client.
Microsoft is making the move not to increase the number of paying Hotmail users but because the feature is being abused by
senders of spam, said Brooke Richardson, lead product manager for MSN at Microsoft.
"Essentially what spammers do is create scripts so they can rapid-fire e-mail from Outlook or Outlook Express and pop off
a hundred e-mails from each of those Hotmail accounts in rapid succession," Richardson said. "On certain days we have seen
tens of thousands of Hotmail accounts set up and spamming in this matter."
To prevent abuse of the feature, Microsoft will stop making it available to new users of free Hotmail and MSN mail accounts
starting Monday. Current users can continue to use the feature but will be asked to become Hotmail subscribers over the coming
months. By April next year, the feature will no longer be available for free, Richardson said.
The Hotmail and MSN mail feature is known as WebDAV, after the Web-based Distributed Authoring and Versioning (WebDAV) protocol
that enables it. It is enabled on about 5 percent, or 9.4 million, of the 187 million active Hotmail accounts, according to
Richardson.
While the decision to make the link with Outlook or Outlook Express a paid service won't be welcome news to some users, Microsoft
had to take the step "for greater good" of the Hotmail and e-mail community, Richardson said. Furthermore, rival Web-based
e-mail providers such as Yahoo Inc. already charge for similar functionality, she said.
Other actions that Microsoft has taken to prevent abuse of Hotmail by senders of spam include a limit on outgoing messages
of 100 per day on free accounts and an extra validation requirement when signing up for an account, Richardson said. "We do
a lot of stuff in terms of understanding the characteristics of spammers so we can watch for them and shut them down when
we see them," she said.
Users who want to use WebDAV to link their Hotmail or MSN mail to an Outlook can subscribe to Hotmail Plus, which also offers
2GB of e-mail space and an account that doesn't expire, for $19.95 per year, or to MSN Premium for $99.95 a year.