This actually happened to me. I have an old Hotmail account I rarely used and hadn't checked in 2-4 months. When I signed on last week all of my emails had been deleted. I was pissed but assumed it was some sort of policy in place.
Your particular problem is most probably their policy of deleting all emails after a certain period of inactivity (90 days if I remember correctly), happened to me too once..
Don't you think it's a bit over the top to call the lack of a feature on a free service blatantly anti-consumer?
Microsoft's online services division loses $100M-$200M each quarter.
Google retains the data indefinitely because it's in their best interests not because of their dedication to the user. Why else would they retain even what the user deletes?
Deleting data from a large scale system I'd actually pretty difficult, since the whole system has been designed NOT to lose data (redundant copies, caches, multiple data centres, backups).
FWIW, my understanding is that Hotmail is not part of the online services division (which is Bing plus MSN), but rather the Windows division (that's why it's "Windows Live Hotmail"). Don't ask me why.
I thought the same thing has happened to me a while back before I noticed that it was syncing up with Apple Mail by default had the option to delete the mail from the server checked.
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[ 2.8 ms ] story [ 37.1 ms ] threadMicrosoft's online services division loses $100M-$200M each quarter.
Google retains the data indefinitely because it's in their best interests not because of their dedication to the user. Why else would they retain even what the user deletes?
>> we have a policy of deleting emails after 270 days
http://www.reddit.com/r/IAmA/comments/ej32l/we_are_the_hotma... (do a search for "270" on the page to find the quote)
Although I have no idea when they changed it to 270 - it can't have been that long ago.