Locked out of account, membership doesn't exist!

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Warks

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I was trying to log in to Velocity to check in for my next flight when I got a message my login was incorrect. The details were saved in the browser so I knew I hadn't changed anything. I tried re-entering the information and was told my account was locked and to call them. Tried the Velocity phone number and got the message it was weekdays 9 to 5 only or words to that effect.

Started again in a new window going into Virgin and got the same locked message but I could unlock by entering my Velocity number and email address. When I did that I got the message that my account didn't exist. Have I been hacked? What IS going on? This is seriously bad.
 
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Well I tried again as I noticed my email had a capital letter at the start due to autocorrect on the phone. I thought it would not make a difference as emails aren't case sensitive. What do you know? It worked so I'm back in. BUT I still can't retrieve my bookings as a Velocity member! Have to copy and paste the booking number every time.
 
Well I tried again as I noticed my email had a capital letter at the start due to autocorrect on the phone. I thought it would not make a difference as emails aren't case sensitive. What do you know? It worked so I'm back in. BUT I still can't retrieve my bookings as a Velocity member! Have to copy and paste the booking number every time.


Not sure if this helps.

When you log into velocity account and go to account details. Select " My bookings" on the left side and you can access the bookings without entering the details each time
 
I thought it would not make a difference as emails aren't case sensitive.

Just to be a pedant: email addresses are case sensitive. Email addresses are defined in a document called RFC 2821, and it says:

The local-part of a mailbox MUST BE treated as case sensitive [...] In particular, for some hosts the user "smith" is different from the user "Smith".

So technically [email protected] and [email protected] are not the same email address (man email providers treat them as case-insensitive, but technically they shouldn't).

The domain part ISN'T case-sensitive (so [email protected] and [email protected] are the same)

/pedant
 
Just to be a pedant: email addresses are case sensitive. Email addresses are defined in a document called RFC 2821, and it says:



So technically [email protected] and [email protected] are not the same email address (man email providers treat them as case-insensitive, but technically they shouldn't).

The domain part ISN'T case-sensitive (so [email protected] and [email protected] are the same)

/pedant
According to the RFC you are indeed correct. In my 20+ years in the industry, i'm yet to see anyone actually enforce it though ;)
 
I wonder what planet they live on. I've used mixed capitalisation or all caps in emails for a long time and they've always worked. I'm even informed that you can insert full stops in between letters in the bit to the left of the @ (domain) without a problem although that may just be Gmail I'm thinking. I've just tried it and it worked.
 
I'm even informed that you can insert full stops in between letters in the bit to the left of the @ (domain) without a problem although that may just be Gmail I'm thinking. I've just tried it and it worked.
That's what I thought I understood with Gmail which would mean that full stops to the left of the @ are ignored.

Which would mean that [email protected] and [email protected] are essentially the same email address.

Does this mean that all other domains adhere to the same standards?
 
Nope. That's basically Gmail-specific. Others may also do it, but it certainly can't be universally relied upon.
 
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