|
|
| | Ask HN: Why does Amazon allow multiple accounts with the same email address? | | 5 points by dancryer on Jan 17, 2014 | hide | past | favorite | 6 comments | | We noticed a few days ago that my girlfriend has two accounts on Amazon (UK - not sure if that makes a difference,) each of which can be logged into with the same email address. The only differentiator at login time is the different password used to log into each account.<p>If she enters one password, she logs into her older account with her old address. With a different password, she logs into her newer account with our newer address, a Prime account.<p>There's no information shared between the accounts, the order histories, names, addresses and so on are all separate. |
|

Guidelines | FAQ | Lists | API | Security | Legal | Apply to YC | Contact
|
[Edit] This was covered in RISKS in 2008. See http://catless.ncl.ac.uk/Risks/25.39.html#subj12 .
> Steve Loughran: Regarding the issue about Amazon allowing >1 login per e-mail address, its a historical legacy that they probably hate. Remember back in 1995 when the whole family had one compuserve or AOL e-mail address? That's when Amazon was created, and that is where they came up with the fact that an Amazon user does not have a 1:1 mapping of e-mail->userID. What they do have is a mapping of (e-mail,password)->userID; you can create two accounts with the same e-mail address, but you will get into trouble if you try and give them the same password. I'm not sure what happens, so try it and see.
> The newer Amazon services, such as the Amazon Web Services, have a stricter "one e-mail address" per account rule. Clearly their support organisation has learned the error of the original design decision.
It doesn't seem possible merge multiple accounts. See this Amazon transcript for a recent example: http://www.amazon.com/forum/amazon?_encoding=UTF8&cdForum=Fx...