Why not just get your own domain? For about $10/yr or so, you can set up your 
DNS/MX records to use any provider you want & fw your yahoo mail 
 (Stay away from GoDaddy.)

You should have a local backup of your own emails, is what Moon Jones was 
trying to say in a rude way.  Easily done with thunderbird.

Would be happy to help you set it up or advise if you need.



 On Jan 30, 2014 2:10 PM, jim bell <[email protected]> wrote: 

By Moon Jones:>Actually the idiot is someone who just does not back up 
important data.>A double idiot I see. I guess that's the trouble with large 
providers:>they let anybody in. Hence the bad publicity.
 I assume Yahoo DOES 'back up important data'.  The problem here is
 different:  The Yahoo computer system probably (falsely) figured that 
there was suspicious activity going on.  (It probably saw my logon Sunday, 
while I was still logged on in another window, as being suspicious).  I 
did not anticipate that my doing what I did was going to be a problem.  
The big problem is that the Yahoo computer system precipitately reacted, quite 
improperly, by not merely suspending the account, but by actually deleting the 
entire account!   This is the computer equivalent of 'insanity'.
I have heard it said that computer features that are infrequently (or even 
rarely) used do not tend to be perfected.  ("Software rot"; see 
   http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Software_rot   )   
Since only rarely would this kind of situation occur, a bug in the system would 
tend not to be quickly found.  
Also, you are wrong for a second reason.  Yahoo (or any other email 
provider) could easily set up their system to keep a backup of the email data 
on the user's computer.  While that data, too, would be vulnerable to 
various events, the probability that BOTH the 'cloud'-kept data AND the 
user-computer-kept data becoming unavailable simultaneously should be 
exceedingly low.  Probably one of the reasons Yahoo doesn't take this 
precaution is
 that they are trying to lock-in users to their system.  If they gave a 
user's computer a copy of the entire content of the user's data, it would be 
too easy (for Yahoo's purposes) for the user to transfer his data to another 
email system:  Competing email systems would be motivated to write 
software to adopt such data into a new account.Even so, I have done a Google 
search for an email-account transfer service.  (Turns out they 
exist!).  What I'd really like to do is to obtain a new email address, but 
simultaneously maintain 'jamesdbell8' as one email address, instructing yahoo 
to automatically transfer any incoming mail to a second address.  This 
feature would greatly ease the
 difficulty of transferring to a different email account.  
       Jim Bell  
 
 
     On Thursday, January 30, 2014 12:02 PM, Moon Jones 
<[email protected]> wrote:
    Actually the idiot is someone who just does not back up important data.A 
double idiot I see. I guess that's the trouble with large providers:they let 
anybody in. Hence the bad publicity.On Thu, Jan 30, 2014, at 18:44, jim bell 
wrote:> My email provider, the idiots at Yahoo.com, crashed my email 
address> account '[email protected]' last Sunday.   I have 
lost my email> addresses, as well as all emails.  For now, I will have 
to operate on a> new email address, '[email protected]'.   At 
this point, Yahoo is my> #1 enemy, and I expect them to be "The first 
against the wall when the> revolution comes".> 
        
 Jim Bell


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