My setup. I'm using the new Edge. I have a personal profile, a work profile, and a profile specifically for dynamics 365. This setup is identical (as far as I can tell) at home but the difference is on my d365 profile at work its continually asking me to use my work account or my d365 account while at home it knows I can only use the d365 account to log in.
Normally this isn't an issue, just choose the account you want and move on. However, in d365 its an issue. It seems as its trying to use my work account over my d365 account and therefore begins to continually prompt me to log in because my work account doesn't have the credentials to access d365. At home, where there is only one on the account choosing prompt, I do not get the issue of constant login prompts.
SO far I've uninstalled Edge via windows uninstaller and restarted. I've used revo uninstaller as well, with a reboot. I've cleared cookies and cache and I cannot get the duplicate account to stop popping up. I've removed the d365 account and re-added to no avail.
I think such work account belongs to an organization and can only be deleted in email & accounts. As you says email & accounts is not an option, you can sign out the profile as a workaround. When you sign out the profile, it will ask you to sign in like this. Then you can sign in with the account you want. Or you can try to remove the profile which having problem and made a new one to see if the issue still persists.
This is the one that worked for me but for me my email was in Settings(desktop settings, not browser settings)->Accounts->Email & Accounts, from there I followed from step #4 and my microsoft account no longer shows up in the Profile window's account selections. Thank you!
First sign in to , using the credential you wanna remove
Then click on your user in the upper left corner, and choose sign-out
After doing this you will see in the next page a button "FORGET THIS ACCOUNT"
I feel like your answer would be correct in almost every sense except in this case I cannot get it to work. I went so far as to delete all browsing data at close, from cookies to saved passwords, deleted all the web credentials. I'm at a loss. I appreciate your help though!
Microsoft accounts are used for a variety of services, including Outlook, Skype, OneDrive, and Xbox Live. However, if you no longer need your Microsoft account, you can easily delete it. This will remove all of your data associated with the account, including your emails, contacts, files, and gaming progress.
Your Microsoft account will be deactivated for 30 or 60 days, depending on your region. During this time, you can log in to your account and restore it if you change your mind. After 30 or 60 days, your account and all its data will be permanently deleted.
Yes, you can delete your account and start over. However, once you delete your account, you lose access to all associated services, emails, files, and subscriptions. After the account is permanently deleted (usually after 60 days), you can create a new Microsoft account from scratch.
When you remove a work account or profile from your device, everything associated with the account is removed from the device, including email, contacts, and settings. If your device has a work profile, then work-managed apps are removed from the device, too. Your Google Workspace data is still available when you sign in with your computer, a web browser, or another authorized mobile device.
Beginning today, you can now completely remove the password from your Microsoft account. Use the Microsoft Authenticator app, Windows Hello, a security key, or a verification code sent to your phone or email to sign in to your favorite apps and services, such as Microsoft Outlook, Microsoft OneDrive, Microsoft Family Safety, and more.
Except for auto-generated passwords that are nearly impossible to remember, we largely create our own passwords. But, given the vulnerability of passwords, requirements for them have gotten increasingly complex in recent years, including multiple symbols, numbers, case sensitivity, and disallowing previous passwords. Updates are often required on a regular basis, yet to create passwords that are both secure enough and memorable enough is a challenge. Passwords are incredibly inconvenient to create, remember, and manage across all the accounts in our lives.
Hackers also have a lot of tools and techniques. They can use automated password spraying to try many possibilities quickly. They can use phishing to trick you into putting your credentials into a fake website. These tactics are relatively unsophisticated and have been in play for decades, but they continue to work because passwords continue to be created by humans.
You can read more about our passwordless journey in a blog from Joy Chik, Corporate Vice President of Identity, or hear more about the benefits for people using Edge or Microsoft 365 apps from Liat Ben-Zur. To learn more about how Microsoft solutions, such as Microsoft Azure Active Directory and Microsoft Authenticator, are allowing users in organizations to forget their passwords while staying protected, join our digital event Your Passwordless Future Starts Now on October 13, 2021.
To learn more about Microsoft Security solutions, visit our website. Bookmark the Security blog to keep up with our expert coverage on security matters. Also, follow us at @MSFTSecurity for the latest news and updates on cybersecurity.
If you use products like Outlook.com, Skype, OneDrive, or Xbox, you likely have a personal Microsoft account. To access and delete data associated with these products, you can sign in to your account.
At Microsoft, we believe privacy starts with putting you in control of your data. Your privacy dashboard is the place where you can view and clear data that Microsoft saves to the cloud. This data includes your browsing and Bing search history, location data, apps and services activity, and more.
We understand that you may want to delete personal data that Microsoft has collected. Your privacy dashboard is the place where you can view and clear data that Microsoft saves to the cloud. This data includes your browsing and Bing search history, location data, apps and services activity, and more.
If you would like to update and remove profile, contact, and security info, you can sign in to your Microsoft account. To close your Microsoft account and delete the data in the account, see How to close your Microsoft account.
Depending on your age and where you live, you may need permission from a parent or guardian to create a Microsoft account. Your parent or guardian may also be asked to create a Microsoft family group.
Yes. If you are looking to view or delete personal data that is not linked to an existing Microsoft account, our privacy team is happy to assist. This may be data collected outside of a logged-in Microsoft account experience, for example, an email address you provided as part of attending an event or using an app. You can submit a request for personal data linked to an email address and other identifiers by contacting our privacy team.
Our products and services offer a number of controls and resources to enable our users to configure the level of privacy appropriate for them. You can manage many of these settings on your privacy dashboard. There you can view, download and clear the most meaningful data tied to your Microsoft account including browse, search history, precise location data, and more. You can also manage apps and services that have permission to access certain data connected to your Microsoft account, choose whether to see interest-based advertising, and update your communications preferences. For Windows users, we have also published detailed information on diagnostic data collection and how you can update your collection settings.
You can opt out of personalized advertising on Microsoft sites and services by visiting the Ads settings page on your privacy dashboard. Please note that this option will not prevent you from seeing ads but means the ads you see will be randomized and may not be of interest to you.
You can choose whether you wish to receive promotional communications from Microsoft by email, SMS, physical mail, and telephone. If you have a personal Microsoft account, you can manage your communications preferences on your privacy dashboard. If you do not have a personal Microsoft account, you can manage your Microsoft email contact preferences by using this web form.
If you live in the EU or are a EU citizen, you can also contact the Microsoft EU Data Protection Officer at: Microsoft Ireland Operations Limited, Attn: Data Protection Officer, One Microsoft Place, South County Business Park, Leopardstown, Dublin 18, Ireland. Telephone: +353 1 706 3117.
My husband kindly set up my new laptop for me when I was busy but thoughtlessly used his Microsoft account, not mine. Now I find I can't find any way to remove it and replace it with mine. Any help would be much appreciated.
That is a question on Microsoft Community and thousands of people have the same question. If you are in a similar situation, how will you remove a Microsoft account from your Windows 10 laptop/PC? Don't worry. This page will help you solve this problem.
That's it. This way, you can remove that initial Microsoft account and replace it with a different one. However, this method may not work in some cases, for example, if you don't know the password for that initial Microsoft account. If so, another method is available for you.
If there is any available local administrator account in this Windows 10 computer, you can sign in with the administrator account and then remove that unwanted Microsoft account using any of the following three methods.
"If you no longer want to use your Skype account, you first need to remove all your personal information from your profile... If you want us to remove your Skype Name from the Skype directory, you need to contact our Skype Customer Service. It may take up to two weeks to remove your name from the directory."
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