I've been seeing several users come to my website (soundkey.com), register, but never activate their account by clicking on the link in the activation email they get.<p>So, I'm turning to the HN community to see whether you guys have any experience with this, and whether you think there is anything fishy behind it.<p>This behavior baffles me because I always activate accounts I register for, but maybe this is normal in terms of the average internet user?<p>Benign reasons I can think of:
(1) People get lazy,
(2) The email went to their spam folder and they can't find it,
(3) They gave a fake email when registering and didn't know they had to activate,
(4) Changed their minds about resgistering,
(5) Other?<p>But, I'm a bit paranoid and wondering whether there are any "nefarious" reasons for doing so.<p>Do you guys know any way to exploit a website in this way?<p>Should I worry about it?<p>Should I email the users a reminder to activate?
This has happened to me on more occasions that I can count:<p>- click on something<p>- oh, I have to register. Grumble.<p>- register<p>- confirmation email isn't in my inbox when I check<p>- refresh a few times. Nope, still not there<p>- forget about the site
It's most likely not nefarious. The combination of your email deliverability and people's laziness will mean that a lot of people probably won't click the activation link.<p>How are you sending email? Are you using AuthSMTP or something like that, or are you just doing it straight from your server? Is your SPF record correct? Have you tried a Port25 scan?<p>You're not an average web user. For a lot of people, checking email is a separate activity from web browsing. If they use Outlook, they have to open a completely separate program just to use your site. They don't have GMail open in a separate tab at all times.<p>I would wonder if you really need people to activate their account that early in the process, but I'm not that familiar with how your site works.
I just registered there to take a look at the activation email that gets sent. It looks like the link is wrapped to two lines - Gmail handles those kinds of links correctly, but some mail clients don't.<p>Do you have a way to shorten that link up some?<p>(I know you can copy & paste the link, but my experience has been that users will try clicking the link and if that doesn't work they give up.)
I've registered on several sites, only to find out that the service is not available outside of the US. It would be good if designers put this information front and centre on the registration page instead of telling me afterwards (ie. Kickstarter).
you could peek at their e-mails to detect some pattern. if you don't "feel" like it's automated, you can delete their accounts after X days or send reminders.