I have provided a lot of proofs but I ignored them and didn’t say at the beginning that only Bitcoin signatures can be provided nor said that only these exchanges will have Bitcoin signatures.
You provided a lot of things I didn't ask for and that are of no use. You repeatedly ignored that I was telling you that a Bitcoin signed message was the only thing that would be acceptable when someone claims an account is theirs even when they don't have the email account associated with that account.
I mean I don't use 2fa on every website but yes Gmail account has 2fa, loooooong pass and number. hacking gmail is not so easy in today's world. If any suspicious activity happens the account gets locked automatically.
It is reckless to tell people that using a strong password is enough to secure their accounts. Now you are doubling down on dumb advice by telling people to trust Google to secure their accounts rather than take responsibility and do it for themselves. When 2fa is available to secure an account containing crypto currency and someone doesn't choose to use it they are failing to take basic precautions.
From a quick look at your post history, I would guess that you are rather new to Bitcoin and probably only see it as a way of making some loose change from faucets. Anyone who had been around for a while would understand that the whole principle of Bitcoin is based on using cryptography to enable people to take control of their own money rather than rely on third parties. I would kindly request that in the future you refrain from giving security advice to my customers because you clearly don't have the first clue what you are talking about.
There are many ways to verify the account such as its IP address, location, fun tokens quantity(if he remember), wallet history. If the wallet account is before the Freebitco account, then it becomes even more clear that the account belongs to this person. but you stick to only one thing. why not give him some other option to prove his ownership? I think you just need an excuse to take advantage of others' money.
There are many ways a hacker could also access ALL that information. I ask for a Bitcoin signed message because that's the only method that is foolproof. In cryptography I trust and so should anyone else that has had any involvement with Bitcoin.
so this is the last hidden policy to rob that 0.00001% people's?
No, it is a policy that protects 100% of accounts from phishing. The number of customers that have recovered accounts using a signed message and have expressed gratitude to me so having such a robust policy to ensure their account wasn't at risk greatly exceeds the number that complain because they can't.