Once again I'm proven right in my decision to only use ProtonMail and Tutanota end-to-end encrypted mails for important stuff.
The rest of providers are only good for basic services!
The rest of providers are only good for basic services!
Nah, they were DDOS'ed and had to pay up the ransom demanded for the attacks to stop. Steps have been taken after that to avoid a future event like that.Wasn't ProtonMail hacked (don't quote me on that!)?
I hope they make Yahoo "..great again!".That's one email service or service I've never, nor liked - I must be blessed. It was Trump, he told Putin to hack Yahoo hoping Hillary was on there.
its time terminate yahoo accounts.
I don't understand why they made it mandatory to add the mobile number to the yahoo account if they can't keep it safe.
It will never happen.I hope they make Yahoo "..great again!".![]()
I hope they make Yahoo "..great again!".![]()
It will never happen.![]()
Me too Cats. I think they will. The passwords are worth what? I mean, users have to come up with a new one, but in the end, what do the proud owners of old passwords of never used accounts really have?
Yahoo isn't just sitting back and watching and allowing hacks to happen. The company itself and the employees failed like other times. However, please let's remember how much of this there is and how many times it's happened to other companies, including Microsoft and literally everyone else.
Yahoo! is a community that is trying to define itself and its niche and place on the internet of things. It's a good thing and a good idea. Good ideas never lose in the long run, so I am sure Yahoo! will recover. Anyway, I'm not going to blame the company. They got big back in the 90s to mid 2000s, so hackers made the site a bullseye for hacks. Still Yahoo! will be bullet-proof someday. I know it's not popular to say so about this, but I do believe it on this one really. Good Yahoo! employees aren't the hackers after all.