Yahoo email problems

I use Yahoo email as a secondary and have had issues for weeks - glad that it is only used for craigslist and other less critical needs. Gmail is my primary and have never had any issues there. Looking for another secondary as Yahoo no longer seems reliable.
 
Yahoo mail is my primary account and I was having difficulties a few days ago but it is running fine now. Service will deteriorate sporadically for short periods and then go back to normal. I always assume they're doing revisions and causing the problems themselves.

I like Yahoo's display functionality and readability much better than g-mail. For personal use g-mail is fine but for business I find it difficult to use.
 
I was having problems with yahoo mail a few weeks ago but seems fine the past few days. In my case, since I am logged in to it on the phone, tablet and laptop, I found that logging out/resetting up accounts on all devices helped stabilize it. I think on the phone, I actually had to remove the account and add the account again.
Try that and see if getting out of mail on all devices helps.
 
Normally, I use Outlook on my desktop. If I'm not at my desktop, I log on to the same account through my yahoo account which was BellSouth and is now AT&T. I also have a secondary yahoo account. The website formats for yahoo and AT&T yahoo are somewhat different. IMHO neither yahoo format can compare with Outlook (not Outlook Express).

I have assumed that when yahoo is slow or spastic, it's because of my DSL or WIFI connection, whereas Outlook automatically downloads to my desktop PC continuously and is there when I want it.
 
I'm finally getting impatient with Yahoo's slow email. It is slow on a PC platform (both desktop and laptop) but OK on my tablet. Quite often (not always) it takes around 7 seconds to open an email to read it.

Because the android app works much better on my tablet, it occurred to me that installing an app on my Win 7 machine might work better then in the browser. Anyone tried this?

I opened a gmail account and like it so far for reading posts on this forum. I have so many links to the yahoo mail from other places that conversion to gmail will take awhile if I decide to go all the way.
 
Another gmail fan here.....


Yahoos been having a really bad month. Yahoo Says Email Accounts Were Hacked But Not How Many : The Two-Way : NPR

From that link:

Yahoo says that based on its current findings, "the list of usernames and passwords that were used to execute the attack was likely collected from a third-party database compromise."

This makes sense - I highly doubt hackers would be able to infiltrate and/or acquire the Yahoo! master password list and somehow brute hack just a small % of user IDs/passwords. Either everyone at Yahoo would need to reset, or no one would. Since many websites require you to use your e-mail address as your user ID, and since many people use the same password for various accounts, it makes sense that the breach was at a 3rd party.

I'm sure something like this has happened at other e-mail providers (Google, Hotmail, etc.), but I don't really see a need to publicize it. If a 3rd party lost their list and people started logging into your account using your password info, does the e-mail provider really need to announce it? Just like when Living Social was hacked last year (speaking as one of the millions of victims of that breach), I'm sure many people had e-mail accounts that were hacked because they used the same login/password as at Living Social. Same would go for any other website that uses your e-mail as a login, or even stores your e-mail address in your user profile (which would be just about every single damn website out there!)

This is precisely why I use 1 password for my e-mail, another for important financial accounts, yet another for bank accounts, another for credit cards/utilities (that are linked to bank accounts), and different ones for lower risk accounts (like this forum). I know some use a program to generate crazy long passwords for accounts, but I like the ability to log in to my accounts anywhere, and I have a hard enough time remembering passwords for infrequently used accounts as it is.
 
...(snip)...
This is precisely why I use 1 password for my e-mail, another for important financial accounts, yet another for bank accounts, another for credit cards/utilities (that are linked to bank accounts), and different ones for lower risk accounts (like this forum). I know some use a program to generate crazy long passwords for accounts, but I like the ability to log in to my accounts anywhere, and I have a hard enough time remembering passwords for infrequently used accounts as it is.
You must have stole those ideas from me. ;)
Good thoughts.
 
This is precisely why I use 1 password for my e-mail, another for important financial accounts, yet another for bank accounts, another for credit cards/utilities (that are linked to bank accounts), and different ones for lower risk accounts (like this forum). I know some use a program to generate crazy long passwords for accounts, but I like the ability to log in to my accounts anywhere, and I have a hard enough time remembering passwords for infrequently used accounts as it is.

Or you could just choose one from this list:
"Password" unseated by "123456" on SplashData’s annual "Worst Passwords" list :cool:
 
The new e-mail interface is driving me crazy. It is too different from what I am used to and I can't read the e-mails very well. (threads, who sent what, etc.).

It also spazzes on me. I suppose it is the slow thing. I try to click on one e-mail to mark it spam, and it jumps on me and I have to undo the action.

When signing out, it sends me instead to a social media page that tells me "my profile is hidden--make it visible." I do not ever want to make my profile visible. I want to check out.

Then there are the Yahoo spam advertising messages in my in-box that I cannot get rid of. They are trying to monetize their e-mail.

So far, Yahoo has only converted one of my two accounts to the new format. When I get some time, I am going to use my Gmail account exclusively and have my Yahoo accounts directed there.

IMHO they have shot themselves in the foot.
 
The Yahoo spam filter seems to work OK. Not 100%, but OK. Except for the spam messages Yahoo sends me themselves.

Two of my professional friends have been hacked in the past and now I get mountains of spam in my professional Yahoo account the same time every day. When it started, I read a few of them. Then I learned even that was a bad move.
 
Rough guess, but I think Gmail delivers 1/10th the spam that Yahoo does, and I mean to the spam folder itself.

When I look in the Yahoo spam folder, I don't understand why they aren't more aggressive in rejecting obvious fraud. I know Gmail is much better at that.

BTW, you can turn off the yahoo thread view.
 
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