Contact the Blizzard account and billing department, prove that the account belongs to you and have it restored.
You can contact Facebook and, if you can prove you are the legal owner of the account, they might reset the password and allow you to access the account again. Otherwise, you probably need to just start a new account and do all you can to keep it safe.
You will probably need to contact xbox support, prove that you are who you say you are (and not some kid trying to do an end run around his parents), and see if they can help you.
show them that you no a lot about them
There could be a couple of ways this has happened. Either a person knows your password or your account has been hacked into. If you can still get into your account, go into it and change your password. Do not have the same password for your email account as you do for your Myspace account. If you can not get into your account, contact Myspace. Myspace will eventually get back to you and ask you to prove it is your account. This is usually done by providing Myspace with a photo of you in front of the image you use as your profile image. If you account has been hacked, this usually happens when you or someone's profile has an application they embedded into their profile section that has a malicious code in it to access your log in information
I had this recently and what i did was facebook them, twitter them and email EA. In the end they tweeted back and got in contact via email and i just had to prove i was me and give them a reg code from one of my games. Sorted!
thats what happened to my sister i feel really bad for her coz mine got hacked but i got it back but now hers is hacked the person changed her emailStardoll send u an email b4 the account is changed, just say u dnt want the email changed & change ure stardoll pass!
Prove that you live somewhere else and have your own policy or change policies
Most banks will ask you to provide some sort of bill (medical, utility, etc) to prove your residence, and you will have to provide i.d. with your current address. So, no.
For your bank account, if your name is on the account speak to your bank. They will provide you with a list of all transactions. For your computer, keep track of your last login time. You can also check with your internet Service Provider to see if anyone has accessed your accounts. Finally, change all of your passwords weekly. This will insure that your ex-spouse cannot access any of your accounts.
If they're hacked Microsoft Points and somebody finds out, then yes. But if you go out and buy 10000000 MP, people are going to question you. Just make sure that you can prove you didn't hack the Microsoft Points.
Yes. If the account holder can prove that the judgment levy is not valid.