What the heck is wrong with Hotmail?

I’ve been using Hotmail as my e-mail service for years. However, starting today, clicking on “free Hotmail” on my internet explorer browser, I’m no longer taken to http://www.hotmail.com but instead to http://www.microsoft.com/misc/redirerr/nomatch.htm

What gives?:confused:

Clicking on your first Hotmail link brought me to this login page for Hotmail.

Might be a DNS problem with your ISP. Dunno.

When I click on your first link I’m taken to http://lc3.law13.hotmail.passport.com/cgi-bin/login which appears to be a login page for Hotmail. If you’re clicking on a link, it may be corrupted. Try typing in the url.

Could also be a cookie issue. Try deleting your hotmail-related cookies and see if that helps.

A friend of mine just spoke to me on ICQ. He has microsoft’s Australian page as his homepage (for some strange reason), and he told me that this morning, clicking on “home” takes him to that http://www.microsoft.com/misc/redirerr/nomatch.htm page that pkbites mentioned.

I haven’t been able to add attachments to any emails all weekend.
Friday, it was fine. Now when I click the attach button after browsing to the file I want to add, it sits there and eventually gives me the “page cannot be displayed”…I swear, If it wasn’t free, I wouldn’t use hotmail at all.

I have not had any problem with hotmail in the last days. After the changes a few weeks ago, the spam filters work pretty well and it all goes to the bulk mail folder.

I work for tech Support at an ISP and today somebody told me that exact same thing - every other site was fine, but Hotmail was unreachable on his entire office LAN.

Looks like, as I suspected, a congenital MS problem somewhere.

The main thing wrong with hotmail is that they don’t curb spammers except for spammers of other hotmail clients. Or maybe they do, but since it is free the culprits just turn around and register for a new free account. Either way, all incoming email of hotmail origin goes straight to the trash by way of spam filter unless I specifically enter an individual as an exception.