
You might try that approach if you think it’s worth it. In extreme cases, the service you’re attempting to get into may listen to lawyers and officers of the court, if you have the legal standing and can afford to go that route. It’s no longer your account, or it never was in the first place.Īnyone who says they can reset or retrieve your password or hack into someone else’s account for you should not be trusted. If you’re trying to hack back into your own account, you’ve probably lost the account forever.

Second: if there is no supported way to get access, or the supported ways don’t work, you can’t get access to the account. All I can say is, you get what you pay for. What if you have a legitimate request, but the service provides no means to act on it?įirst: that’s typical for free services. Legitimate requests with no available support Go to the service in question, and only the service in question, for account recovery options. Only Microsoft can reset a Microsoft account password only Google can do it for Google accounts only Facebook can do it for Facebook. I don’t have the technology to get or set your password. I don’t have access to what I need to prove you have the right to access the account. I literally don’t have the ability to do it.Hacking into someone else’s account without their permission is wrong.īeing wrong is not the only reason for my position. I have many reasons for taking this position, but the biggest reason is very simple: I cannot and will not help you hack some account.I cannot and will not hack an account for you.I cannot and will not retrieve a password for you.Back up the information in your account so as to never lose anything, and consider a paid account with real support for when problems arise. Keep the recovery information up to date.

To retain access to your own accounts, secure them to keep from losing them, and add recovery information to get back in if you do. Hacking into an account is wrong, and is never the answer.
