Yahoo Mail just got bigger
Checked my Yahoo mail this morning and got a pleasant surprise: Increased storage capacity – from your current level to 100MB Increase in individual message send/receive size from 3MB to 10MB An improved layout that’s even easier to use Must say that this is quite a nice change from 6mb storage space.
Checked my Yahoo mail this morning and got a pleasant surprise:
Increased storage capacity – from your current level to 100MB
Increase in individual message send/receive size from 3MB to 10MB
An improved layout that’s even easier to use
Must say that this is quite a nice change from 6mb storage space.
Next they'll be paying us to use their service.
Increased storage capacity – from your current level to 100MB
Increase in individual message send/receive size from 3MB to 10MB
An improved layout that’s even easier to use
Must say that this is quite a nice change from 6mb storage space.
Next they'll be paying us to use their service.
Participate on our website and join the conversation
This topic is archived. New comments cannot be posted and votes cannot be cast.
Responses to this topic
we have yahoo blocked because we were getting 1000 spam emails a day
(yes one thousand)
one of our customers also block all of yahoo email.
instead of more size they should fix that
(yes one thousand)
one of our customers also block all of yahoo email.
instead of more size they should fix that
Where the e-mails actually coming from Yahoo domains or was it that the spammers were spoofing their addresses. A few months ago I was receiving many "undeliverable" auto-responders as someone was spoofing my Yahoo address to send spam.
You can't stop that happening but you could get your mail server to determine if the domain on the e-mail address matches the source domain. Where it doesn't match, can the message.
ie - message from xyz@yahoo.com, originated from xx.spammachine.dodgydomain.com therefore kill die death, however if message from xyz@yahoo.com originates from xx.xx.yahoo.com then it's okay.
Alternately you could find out who is sending the spam and pay them a visit to hack off their hands with a reem of paper.
You can't stop that happening but you could get your mail server to determine if the domain on the e-mail address matches the source domain. Where it doesn't match, can the message.
ie - message from xyz@yahoo.com, originated from xx.spammachine.dodgydomain.com therefore kill die death, however if message from xyz@yahoo.com originates from xx.xx.yahoo.com then it's okay.
Alternately you could find out who is sending the spam and pay them a visit to hack off their hands with a reem of paper.