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If you haven’t registered in your Samsung account for a few years, you may have to do this if you want to keep it. Samsung has started notifying customers that it considers any accounts that have not been used or logged in it for two years as “inactive” and they will be “deleted” after it entered a new policy on July 31.
“If an account is deleted, access to the account will be restricted and all data related to the account will be deleted,” and he also reads an email issued to customers on Wednesday. “Deleted accounts and data cannot be restored.”
This may be painful if you are a former Samsung user and you want to return to the future without losing your account data. The Galaxy Store and Samsung applications for things like Health and Galaxy Combaring also require the Samsung account to log in, which means that you are risked by losing access to data related to these services. Some data may be kept after deleting the account, but Samsung says this only corresponds to legal requirements.
The inactive inactive account policy makes exceptions to registered family accounts, accounts that contain a “accumulation record/use points”, and the accounts used to buy products on Samsung, all of which will be considered active. For anyone who is outside these exceptions, deleting the account is easy to fortunately evading – according to Samsung, all you have to do is use “at least one” in the use or activity that was discovered for the account every two years. This includes creating the account itself, logging in to the Samsung account, or using a connected service while logging in.
If you do not have any intention to return to Samsung, you can allow the company to calculate your account and data instead of doing it yourself. Just make sure that the connected applications in this process are not closed.