It's not a feature, it's a bug.
Oct. 2nd, 2007 05:10 pmAttempt to create a second account on a website.
Goodness
^
| Direct you to the previous account, but give an "i meant it" button
| Direct you to the previous account, with an explanation
| Direct you to the previous account
| Simply let you do so
| Create an empty account making it impossible to log in to the first
v
Badness
By the way, CookiePie is another necessary idea for a Firefox extension. It can make one tab have a separate cookies, so you can have two accounts on the same site open at once.
In this case, the site's developers were even more cunning -- they detected an account logged in to/logged out of from the same computer, and logged out the first account at that time. Which is impressive attention to detail, eg. preventing you leaving lj logged in when you log out/someone else logs in in another browser is useful. But very irritating in that a feature naturally automatically exists is, with hard work, eliminated.
(If two accounts was a paid feature, or if 100 accounts could be used for spamming, I'd understand them preventing it, but there didn't seem any detriment to letting people use multiple accounts for different reasons or for experimentation.)
Goodness
^
| Direct you to the previous account, but give an "i meant it" button
| Direct you to the previous account, with an explanation
| Direct you to the previous account
| Simply let you do so
| Create an empty account making it impossible to log in to the first
v
Badness
By the way, CookiePie is another necessary idea for a Firefox extension. It can make one tab have a separate cookies, so you can have two accounts on the same site open at once.
In this case, the site's developers were even more cunning -- they detected an account logged in to/logged out of from the same computer, and logged out the first account at that time. Which is impressive attention to detail, eg. preventing you leaving lj logged in when you log out/someone else logs in in another browser is useful. But very irritating in that a feature naturally automatically exists is, with hard work, eliminated.
(If two accounts was a paid feature, or if 100 accounts could be used for spamming, I'd understand them preventing it, but there didn't seem any detriment to letting people use multiple accounts for different reasons or for experimentation.)