I had something like that happen to my personal yahoo mail a few years ago,
except that it was more like 50,000 emails. They were having some issue
with one (or more) of their Netapp NAS systems. Took them a day or two to
sort it out. In the meantime I had downloaded all the email anyway.
--
bp
part15sbs{at}gmail{dot}com


On Tue, Jan 8, 2019 at 9:08 AM Ken Hohhof <af...@kwisp.com> wrote:

> I had a customer call yesterday saying he suddenly received 4000 emails in
> one day, plus 2 of his credit cards were “hacked” by which he means
> fraudulent purchases.  And somehow he is thinking this is his ISPs fault.
> I have heard lots of email problems through the years, but suddenly 4000
> emails in one day is a new one, especially if they all passed the spam
> filter.  And as far as his Best Buy credit card which he says he hasn’t
> used in 2 years and isn’t on his computer, all I can say is who has a Best
> Buy credit card?
>
>
>
>
>
> *From:* AF <af-boun...@af.afmug.com> *On Behalf Of *ch...@wbmfg.com
> *Sent:* Monday, January 7, 2019 4:56 PM
> *To:* af@af.afmug.com
> *Subject:* [AFMUG] OT My 2018 Email Traffic
>
>
>
> 17225    Received
>
> 13481    Sent
>
>
>
> 30706    Total
>
>
>
> 14.76 emails per hour either read or written if confined to work hours
> only.
>
> Averages 1 every 4 minutes.
>
>
>
> Additionally about 9229 animal farm emails for fun.
>
>
>
> And my kids think I should also text and FB and tweet and and and????
> --
> AF mailing list
> AF@af.afmug.com
> http://af.afmug.com/mailman/listinfo/af_af.afmug.com
>
-- 
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