No Easy Way Out For Yahoo! eGroups Subscribers 13
An Anonymous Coward writes: "Yahoo! Groups, who manages former eGroups mailing lists has a strange policy on unsubscribing people who joined eGroups via e-mail subscription before eGroups have been taken over by Yahoo!--the only way to unsubscribe is to join Yahoo! (giving your full details and a corect e-mail address) and then unsubscribe using the Web interface. The e-mail unubscription feature, although theoretically still available, does not work. Looks like not all Yahoo! Groups subscribers are equal."
Not entirely true. (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Not entirely true. (Score:2, Informative)
Admittedly this address was unknown to Yahoo before today, so I cannot comment about long-time eGroups subscribers, but I must say that many of the gloom-and-doom predictions from a year ago about Yahoo's takeover of eGroups turned out to be so much hot air.
Of the three addresses that Yahoo knows about in conjunction with eGroups, none seemed to get junk mail as a result. The one which is posted on several web pages suffers an almost continual onslaught of "horny teenage girls" and "secret stock tips" junk mail, so I just consider that one my throw-away address.
Tempest in a teapot? You be the judge.
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Re:Not entirely true. (Score:1)
This is quite important because some of our subscribers have no web access or sit behind a firewall (Hello Goldman-Sachs) that blocks access to Yahoo.
Unsubscribe (Score:3, Funny)
Bug? (Score:1)
Did you think of that and ask Yahoo about it before inventing some bizarre conspiracy theory and posting it to
Perhaps if Yahoo were informed responsibly they would fix it for you.
Re:Bug? (Score:1)
Re:Bug? (Score:2, Insightful)
This has to be at the top of the 'common mistake' list. Of course, we all know the #1 mistake of sending 'unsubscribe' to the list address and not the listserv address. ARRRRGHHH!
If the concerned party is an eGroup moderator, go to the group's web page and click on 'Activity' in the panel to the left. It will show you subscription activity, including e-mail requests to unsubscribe. That should verify one way or another what happened. I have seen rare screwups with that mechanism, but I think the address in question in that case had "issues".
To their credit, Yahoo does allow you to specify other addresses for posting and perhaps administering the account via e-mail. I'm sure this is yet another sinister plot to collect addresses, though.
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Illegal (Score:2, Insightful)
IIRC you must supply an easy way to remove someone from a mailing list.
Geocities (Score:3, Interesting)
Thats what (Score:1)
Please remove me from this website I have to get some work done...