Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's contagious. I don't have Yahoo. I have AOL, and email has been inaccessible for the past hour. AOL acknowledges the problem and is working on it.
Why on earth are you still using either of these services? It is 2025.
DP but I've had my yahoo address since 1999. Why would I change it?
Because at some point Yahoo are going to go out of business and you’re going to lose everything. Yahoo is mainly free email and sports and news. They have stagnated as a company and havelost a lot of market share to Google and Facebook, both of whom are growing with the times - think YouTube, Google fiber, tv, and instagram, meta quest. gen Z send a lot more messages than email.
I understand you want to be defensive of your choice. But you sound like someone bragging that they’ve had the same land phone number for 25 years.it’s okay to get a cell phone. No one will judge you.
But you don’t need to completely deactivate your yahoo email; but if you haven’t already, you should get a Gmail account and slowly start transitioning to it
It can sooner than you think.... Yahoo emailed customers that they are reducing the 1TB storage to 20GB... less than a cell phone.... unless you pay a monthly fee. Us 90s users are screwed.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's contagious. I don't have Yahoo. I have AOL, and email has been inaccessible for the past hour. AOL acknowledges the problem and is working on it.
Why on earth are you still using either of these services? It is 2025.
DP but I've had my yahoo address since 1999. Why would I change it?
Because at some point Yahoo are going to go out of business and you’re going to lose everything. Yahoo is mainly free email and sports and news. They have stagnated as a company and havelost a lot of market share to Google and Facebook, both of whom are growing with the times - think YouTube, Google fiber, tv, and instagram, meta quest. gen Z send a lot more messages than email.
I understand you want to be defensive of your choice. But you sound like someone bragging that they’ve had the same land phone number for 25 years.it’s okay to get a cell phone. No one will judge you.
But you don’t need to completely deactivate your yahoo email; but if you haven’t already, you should get a Gmail account and slowly start transitioning to it
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's contagious. I don't have Yahoo. I have AOL, and email has been inaccessible for the past hour. AOL acknowledges the problem and is working on it.
Why on earth are you still using either of these services? It is 2025.
DP but I've had my yahoo address since 1999. Why would I change it?
Because at some point Yahoo are going to go out of business and you’re going to lose everything. Yahoo is mainly free email and sports and news. They have stagnated as a company and havelost a lot of market share to Google and Facebook, both of whom are growing with the times - think YouTube, Google fiber, tv, and instagram, meta quest. gen Z send a lot more messages than email.
I understand you want to be defensive of your choice. But you sound like someone bragging that they’ve had the same land phone number for 25 years.it’s okay to get a cell phone. No one will judge you.
But you don’t need to completely deactivate your yahoo email; but if you haven’t already, you should get a Gmail account and slowly start transitioning to it
What does that even mean??
Most don't have a backup of their cloud data. You can request a data dump from Google. Not sure Yahoo offers that.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's contagious. I don't have Yahoo. I have AOL, and email has been inaccessible for the past hour. AOL acknowledges the problem and is working on it.
Why on earth are you still using either of these services? It is 2025.
DP but I've had my yahoo address since 1999. Why would I change it?
Because at some point Yahoo are going to go out of business and you’re going to lose everything. Yahoo is mainly free email and sports and news. They have stagnated as a company and havelost a lot of market share to Google and Facebook, both of whom are growing with the times - think YouTube, Google fiber, tv, and instagram, meta quest. gen Z send a lot more messages than email.
I understand you want to be defensive of your choice. But you sound like someone bragging that they’ve had the same land phone number for 25 years.it’s okay to get a cell phone. No one will judge you.
But you don’t need to completely deactivate your yahoo email; but if you haven’t already, you should get a Gmail account and slowly start transitioning to it
What does that even mean??
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's contagious. I don't have Yahoo. I have AOL, and email has been inaccessible for the past hour. AOL acknowledges the problem and is working on it.
Why on earth are you still using either of these services? It is 2025.
DP but I've had my yahoo address since 1999. Why would I change it?
Because at some point Yahoo are going to go out of business and you’re going to lose everything. Yahoo is mainly free email and sports and news. They have stagnated as a company and havelost a lot of market share to Google and Facebook, both of whom are growing with the times - think YouTube, Google fiber, tv, and instagram, meta quest. gen Z send a lot more messages than email.
I understand you want to be defensive of your choice. But you sound like someone bragging that they’ve had the same land phone number for 25 years.it’s okay to get a cell phone. No one will judge you.
But you don’t need to completely deactivate your yahoo email; but if you haven’t already, you should get a Gmail account and slowly start transitioning to it
dp. The problem with google accts is that they tie everything together. If I sign into a gmail, for example, then my google acct (which I set up w yahoo mail) is activated. I can't let one company have everything. When yahoo mail dies, I'm going off the grid.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's contagious. I don't have Yahoo. I have AOL, and email has been inaccessible for the past hour. AOL acknowledges the problem and is working on it.
Why on earth are you still using either of these services? It is 2025.
DP but I've had my yahoo address since 1999. Why would I change it?
Because at some point Yahoo are going to go out of business and you’re going to lose everything. Yahoo is mainly free email and sports and news. They have stagnated as a company and havelost a lot of market share to Google and Facebook, both of whom are growing with the times - think YouTube, Google fiber, tv, and instagram, meta quest. gen Z send a lot more messages than email.
I understand you want to be defensive of your choice. But you sound like someone bragging that they’ve had the same land phone number for 25 years.it’s okay to get a cell phone. No one will judge you.
But you don’t need to completely deactivate your yahoo email; but if you haven’t already, you should get a Gmail account and slowly start transitioning to it
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's contagious. I don't have Yahoo. I have AOL, and email has been inaccessible for the past hour. AOL acknowledges the problem and is working on it.
Why on earth are you still using either of these services? It is 2025.
DP but I've had my yahoo address since 1999. Why would I change it?
Because at some point Yahoo are going to go out of business and you’re going to lose everything. Yahoo is mainly free email and sports and news. They have stagnated as a company and havelost a lot of market share to Google and Facebook, both of whom are growing with the times - think YouTube, Google fiber, tv, and instagram, meta quest. gen Z send a lot more messages than email.
I understand you want to be defensive of your choice. But you sound like someone bragging that they’ve had the same land phone number for 25 years[b].it’s okay to get a cell phone. No one will judge you.
But you don’t need to completely deactivate your yahoo email; but if you haven’t already, you should get a Gmail account and slowly start transitioning to it
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's contagious. I don't have Yahoo. I have AOL, and email has been inaccessible for the past hour. AOL acknowledges the problem and is working on it.
Why on earth are you still using either of these services? It is 2025.
DP but I've had my yahoo address since 1999. Why would I change it?
Because at some point Yahoo are going to go out of business and you’re going to lose everything. Yahoo is mainly free email and sports and news. They have stagnated as a company and havelost a lot of market share to Google and Facebook, both of whom are growing with the times - think YouTube, Google fiber, tv, and instagram, meta quest. gen Z send a lot more messages than email.
I understand you want to be defensive of your choice. But you sound like someone bragging that they’ve had the same land phone number for 25 years.it’s okay to get a cell phone. No one will judge you.
But you don’t need to completely deactivate your yahoo email; but if you haven’t already, you should get a Gmail account and slowly start transitioning to it
Anonymous wrote:I haven't been able to access it either.
I always think that those of us with Yahoo, Hotmail or AOL email addresses are better at withstanding peer pressure. Yahoo email may not be as cool as Gmail, but it has 1 TB of free storage. I've had the same email for 25 years.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's contagious. I don't have Yahoo. I have AOL, and email has been inaccessible for the past hour. AOL acknowledges the problem and is working on it.
Why on earth are you still using either of these services? It is 2025.
DP but I've had my yahoo address since 1999. Why would I change it?
it’s okay to get a cell phone. No one will judge you.
Anonymous wrote:We had an intern whose personal email was an aol account this summer.