#how to change yahoo password email
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This place looks a bit different
So was anyone going to tell me that tumblr isn't dark blue anymore, or was I just supposed to find out about it like some kinda chump?
#isaac speaks!#interesting to see how things have changed#lots of mutuals are no longer around#and some mutuals actually still are!#feels like a lifetime oh my GOD#im trying to log back into my mbti blog but i cant lmao#ive had so many emails over the years its hard to know which one to use#i think i figured it out though#i used my very first email - a YAHOO EMAIL can you believe it?#i literally have to wait for yahoo to like reactivate it before i can start receiving emails to reset my password#gonna have to change the account email to something more updated lmao
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most off the wall interaction I had at work today was trying to walk someone through how to change their yahoo email password when they no longer have the number that they had associated with it anymore.
then being rude w/me when I told her that she would have to contact Yahoo because we cannot breach Yahoo's servers to recover her password.
her words were "can you not just get my password from Yahoo??" 😭
ma'am I'm trying to help you to the best of my ability. "Let me speak to a tech" ma'am I'm the only one here who still uses Yahoo and has an intimate knowledge of how to recover your password. I'm sorry you don't have the phone number on your account anymore but this is outta my hands.
#work.exe#this is on par with the person asking if we can hack her gmail account and remove her password
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A Day in the Life
Original Post Date: Feb 26th, 2013
Egads, I don’t think I’ve really done a proper Journal-like entry. Normal life happenings usually leak into a post here and there but I don’t actually sit down to talk about anything at any length. Well, this is going to be one of those. I’m not even really sure how to tag this thing, so it won’t get a lot of views. I guess I can just scroll down and tag every Noun I see. Considering the best advice a writer can give to oneself - Just keep writing. I will however, start with the usual gamer-related nonsense.
First, trying to fix my Xbox Account. Y'see, I got my Xbox several years ago upon a Christmas Day. It has lasted five times it’s usual lifespan, because I got my Xbox back when they Red-Ring’d at around 1 year. Companies of course do this on purpose so they can continue to make money. However mine has been a real goddamn trooper.
have Red-Ring’d, and sent it in for repairs. Also free of charge. It’s been fine ever since.
It’s been SUCH a trooper that when it eventually DOES die on me, I don’t think I’ll even be that sad. It’s lasted so damn long and am probably due for a new one anyway.
Anyway, that’s all just backstory. That’s not even the problem now.
The problem is that my Xbox’s email is extremely outdated. It’s using an email I had since I was like, 10 years old. As a result, it’s been hijacked more than once and while I HAVE changed its password before, its been hijacked again and the security question was changed to “Where did you meet your spouse?” Yea. Considering I don’t fucking HAVE one of those.
After that, everything is just one big clusterfuck of confusion. I can’t get into that email to figure out what my Xbox’s account’s password is. I created a new email but unwittingly just spawned another Xbox account for no reason in attempts to contact support or ANYONE really, which might have locked out the attempt to tie that email into my main Xbox account. Which may not be a problem, I could just whip up yet another yahoo email account.
Either way, all things point to one thing: My main account and its near 20,000 gamerscore is about to be promptly fucked. I’m going to wait a couple months at least, for my Xbox Live to run out. But it’s still frustrating because there’s all this progress I will lose. Such as recently, on Mass Effect 3… I’ll lose all the multiplayer to single player perks.
Good news? I won’t lose any of my DLC. Silver lining, I guess.
Anyway, that kind of turned into a gamer post anyway, so let’s get to what’s been going on with my life.
My teeth are kind of fucked up. A combination of laziness and ignorance, I didn’t brush much. Well folks, I’ve been scared straight. I now have a cavity that grew so much, I now have an exposed nerve in my gums. What does this mean? Well, before two days ago, it usually meant that I would suffer one to two hours of excruciating pain. I couldn’t eat, sleep, or even think straight. I would just be writhing in pain while I waited for the Advil to kick in.
Needless to say, I’ve been brushing properly for the past couple of weeks. As of two days ago, that once-a-day episode of holy fuck, please someone rip this tooth out of me, has subsided. I’ve gone two days without one of those episodes so my daily hygiene has somewhat solved the issue. I still need to brush and take some Advil every few hours… But once I get to the Clinic and get the cavity filled, the Advil will be unnecessary. So, progress.
Also, last night. I stepped on my cat.

Okay that’s unfair, she didn’t run in front of me at all. Y'see, my room is right next to the stairs. My cat (Named Yancy) has this little spot in the dark corner of the stairs where she curls up and just chillax’s. I’m usually aware of this. I turn the corner and can usually see a dark void that is most certainly my cat. Usually. This time, it didn’t work like that. What happened instead, was I went downstairs to get a refill of my Tang (Not of the poon variety, sadly) and briefly felt a fleshy mash on my foot and I fell backwards unto the stairs. You’d think falling “back” on the stairs would just be falling on one’s ass but NOPE, doesn’t work like that. You still pretty much fall down the goddamn stairs, halfway in my case. I’m slightly injured. I have neck and arm pains that haven’t subsided yet, but I think if anything actually broke, I’d damn well know it. No severe bruising of any kind, but I’m still hurtin’.
That’s it for me, for now.
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The most efficient way to conduct Yahoo backup
Events as ordinary as a technical fault, hardware failure or accidental email deletion, can distance us from the digital world of emails. The answer to this issue is right within vicinity if we pay enough attention to it. We just need to backup Yahoo email regularly to open up another avenue for accessing email data when situations are not in our favor. It's as easy as that. Yet, many among us remain oblivious to this need and pay the heavy price of permanent data loss when the disaster strikes. But things must change and we must realize the importance of regular Yahoo backup. This article will be an eye opener as it will elucidate the most efficient way to conduct email backup. So, read on.
Mail Backup X is a perfect remedy that cures the disease of data loss once and for all

Mail Backup X is a flexible application that puts you in charge of email management by allowing a lot of customizations that help you devise the most beneficial strategy of Yahoo email backup. This tool does not impose full backups on you, but hands you the freedom of going down the route of selective backups when you can easily figure out the backup-worthy mails. But this doesn't imply that you cannot choose full backups when it is the more appropriate option. Automatic incremental backups will aid in keeping a backup storage site fully updated to the point of last received email. This tool also lets you choose an appropriate backup frequency and timing so that all gaps in data security are well taken care of.
It is also necessary to know the merits and demerits of different backup repositories, so that you can concoct a backup plan which gives rise to maximum data redundancy. Backups onto local hard drive facilitate quick data access but we must be aware of the possibility of hardware corruption. Portable backups onto an external storage media like a pen drive are also subject to same risks. Backups onto cloud storage services may sometimes be temporarily inaccessible due to server issues. Losing access to all these backup sites at the same time is almost impossible. This is the reason why experts advise us to execute 3-2-1 backup plan by situating backups on all three backup sites to augment data redundancy which will come to our rescue in the event of data loss. This can become an intricate exercise when using complexities-ridden tools, but this user friendly tool makes this a straightforward task. You just need to specify your choice of multiple backup locations while initiating a backup session and the rest will be taken care of automatically. It gets as easy as that with this user friendly Yahoo mail backup tool.
Backup Yahoo with excellent data security techniques in action playing their role to perfection
Storing backups onto multiple sites is just one side of the coin; data security is incomplete unless these backups are highly encrypted. This is where Mail Backup X comes in play by securing backups with multiple layers of encryption. Google approved login ensures that your login details are not leaked or stored anywhere. Users are given the option of password protection to augment the security of confidential files. Stringent network security protocols also play their role excellently by warding off internet threats.
This Yahoo backup tool bubbles with features that will provide you an extra dosage of satisfaction
This tool offers a wholesome experience to users with no lacks whatsoever. Twin compatibility with Windows and Mac is a real game changer for seekers of advanced email management.
Backup Yahoo mail or for that matter emails from a wide range of email clients with ease and precision you desire.
This lightweight tool is quite unlike those resource hungry applications that mar the performance of your PC in a big way. No more system slowdowns or system crashes due to an overloaded CPU.
Once a full backup session has been completed, the difficult part is how to deal with mails that arrive after that. This tool easily solves this quandary by setting automatic incremental backups into motion so that all gaps in data security are duly plugged.
Selective backups allow you to show the exit door to the non-essential data by storing only work-critical data in backups.
This tool supports mirror backup, which is yet another dependable alternative to source hassle-free data recovery.
Multilayered encryption gives a much needed thrust to data security, saving your confidential data from being preyed by malice mongers.
3x data compression is achievable with this tool and that too without posing threats to data integrity.
PDF archiving allows you to save files in a format that facilitates a convenience-rich viewing experience and is ideal for long term data retention.
This tool speeds up the process of email search with an inbuilt smart search module.
Smart backup and resume is another well liked feature of this tool that saves an interrupted backup session from going to waste.
This Yahoo backup tool is just what you need to enjoy heightened data security
To stay productive a business organization must have uninterrupted access to emails 24/7 so that work allocation and urgent tasks do not become victims of uncalled for data loss. This tool will surround your data with multiple layers of encryption to dispel any fear of internet threats preying on your privacy or sensitive email data. Users can also contribute towards setting up an indomitable infrastructure of data security by chipping in with password protection. Google approved login is an assurance that your privacy is highly valued and nothing can go wrong in this regard.
Avail a free demo
To benefit from technological affluence at its very best, you must get this tool right away. The best way of initiating an early journey into the technologically affluent landscape of this tool is by availing its free demo www.mailbackupx.com/yahoo-backup-tool.
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I hate how much more complicated computer security measures for things we don’t want make things.
I do not want to have a Microsoft account. I do not need it. I do not use Microsoft features, just use their operating system. But I have to have one. I need a password for it and I need to set a pin on my laptop.
So there was an issue with my pin apparently, and I had to reset it. To do that, I had to login to the Microsoft account. They didn’t like the password I gave it, so I had to then get a pin from my email - which is of course, something I can only get from another device - so that way I could get into the password changing portion. It then rejected my next five passwords because they were all old passwords. Then it made me get ANOTHER pin from my email to confirm the changes.
Meanwhile my age old yahoo because it’s what was connected to my Microsoft account is pushing me for two factor authentication. Yeah, maybe next time? Go answer two captchas to log into your email. We know you just turned down two factor but do you want to set up a fingerprint scanner? What do you mean you don’t have one on your device. Anyway here’s that pin you wanted from an email you won’t use again for another month at least.
Bruh I just want to log into the desktop on the $2000 piece of hardware that I paid my own money to own why was this a 15 minute process. Why does AMD now want access to my laptop’s location data? This is miserable and nothing new and I want it all to die.
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How to delete your Yahoo account permanently
While closing an old email account can help you stay organized, deleting Yahoo Mail may actually be a security requirement, particularly in light of previous security lapses. In order to streamline digital management and lessen your digital footprint, delete any outdated or unused emails as they tend to attract spam. However, the process of deleting your Yahoo account is irreversible – back up all your important information first.
How to delete a Yahoo account
If you delete your Yahoo email account, you will also lose My Yahoo settings, Flickr account and photos, Yahoo Messenger and other data related to your Yahoo account. Make sure you download any information you might need later before ending your Yahoo email account. Verify that you are certain that you want to close your Yahoo email account.
To remove your Yahoo account, take the following actions:
Log in to your Yahoo account.
Open “Subscriptions.”
Make sure you don’t have any active subscriptions before deleting your account.
Next, navigate to the Yahoo account cancellation website.
Press “Continue delete my account.”
Once your email address has been entered, click "Yes, close this account."
According to Yahoo, the removal process can take several days or even weeks to finish, and it might take longer in some nations. After you terminate the account, any emails sent to this Yahoo account will bounce back with a delivery failure message.
Yahoo also says that even when the account is completely closed, some of your information "may possibly remain" in their systems. To find out more about which information might be stored, visit Yahoo’s Data Storage and Anonymization support page.
How to reactivate a Yahoo account
To reactivate your Yahoo mail account, all you need to do is log back in with your original login details. After confirming your recovery details, you'll need to create a new password.
Once you delete your Yahoo account, you’ll have 30 days to change your mind. Your former account will be permanently deleted when the 30-day period has passed, and there will be no way to retrieve it. Even though a 30-day delay is typical throughout much of the world, be sure to confirm the rules in your own nation. Users from Australia and New Zealand, for instance, have ninety-nine days to get their accounts back.
Should you delete your Yahoo account?
Yahoo has a poor security record, so a user can’t be blamed for wanting to close their Yahoo account.
Verizon, an Internet service provider that battled for the right to sell your search history to unaffiliated parties, acquired Yahoo. Yahoo Mail also scans your messages in order to show you personally relevant offers based on the information it has gathered on you.
Almost one in seven people on Earth had their Yahoo account data compromised between 2013 and 2014.
In 2017, Yahoo issued another data security warning. In 2015 and 2016, 32 million Yahoo email addresses were impacted by forged browser cookies, as opposed to over a billion email addresses being compromised.
Hackers typically search databases for compromised login credentials and attempt to access other websites using email addresses that have been made public online. A data breach might potentially jeopardize all of your accounts if you happen to use the same login information for multiple of them.
We recommend that you check the strength of your password and see if it has ever been compromised, even if you don't believe that any information related to your account has been compromised. Additionally, you may determine if any other past data breaches have resulted in the compromise of your password.
How to use a Yahoo account safely
Yahoo has experienced numerous significant data breaches. Given that over a billion accounts have been compromised, it becomes sense that some consumers might think twice before opening a Yahoo account. It's preferable to be proactive about online security in general rather than depending on Yahoo's protection. These are some of the greatest methods for maintaining your online safety if you use a Yahoo account.
Use a password manager.
Using an encrypted vault that is only accessible by you, a password manager totally secures the passwords to all of your accounts. Software like NordPass can generate complex passwords so you don’t have to. When prompted, the passwords will also autofill the correct criteria, meaning you don’t need to memorize complicated strings of letters, numbers and symbols.
Exercise caution online.
Hackers and cybercriminals will employ social engineering to persuade you into handing out identifying data, or even accidently divulging your account login details.
Furthermore, stay away from clicking links in unsolicited emails as they can direct users to browser hijackers. It could be a sign of malicious software modifying your browser's settings if your search engine keeps switching to Yahoo or other strange websites. Use reliable antivirus software and check your browser's settings and extensions on a regular basis to avoid this.
https://gvaccountbuy.com/gmail-smtp/
https://gvaccountbuy.com/product/api-gmail-for-blasting/
https://gvaccountbuy.com/gmail-smtp-server/
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So my older sister has decided to do that thing where you google your own name to see what information about yourself is on the internet up for grabs by information brokers and guess what?
As far as the internet is concerned I don't actually exist as anything beyond being one of my sister's aliases.
Though my sister technically has two entries on this website.
The one under our merged identity (her first name, my middle name, my last name which is also her maiden name), which is also seemingly merged with a random 3rd women who neither of us know. Which also has my birthday listed, but has no known relatives or associates listed (because that person doesn't exist).
Then another under her current name, which changed when she got married. Which fails to list her birthday or phone number, but does have her connected to various other people. Like her husband's family are all listed as relatives, but our mom is just listed as someone she might know.
Though we think there's still some influence of the random 3rd women who's part of the other entry, because she's also listed as knowing or being related to a bunch of people that neither of us know.
Current theory is that the weird jankey amalgam of 3 different women identity profile is actually supposed to be me.
I think me and her (original) online identities got merged when Google bought Youtube.
At e point before the merger, I had let her use my yahoo to sign up for a Youtube account, after she lost the password to her previous account. Even though I already had an account using that same yahoo (which I knew was weird and broken to be able to do that in the first place).
After the merger our two separate Youtube accounts got merged because they were using the same email address. Specifically my account got cannibalized by her account more or less, because I wasn't able to access my original Youtube account at all after that, and attempting to use my log in sent me to the account she'd made using my yahoo as the email.
Which was then furthered by the fact that we would use eachother's emails for stuff pretty frequently.
Like if we wanted a free trial for a streaming service because there was a show on there we wanted to watch, if my sister didn't have a random email that could be used (she has so many email addresses nowadays, I don't know how she keeps track of them) we'll just use mine.
Or using each other's email addresses as recovery emails.
Where this random 3rd women comes in I'm not sure, but it's her email address that's currently listed on this dossier, which would explain why I don't get spam emails at all.
There are various stuff like my old facebook account that I've been locked out of since the early 2010s and the third person could have just stolen.
So the 3rd woman could be an attempted identity thief who got screwed over by the internet thinking I am but already someone else's false identity.
#so apparently the internet doesn't think I exist as a real person#but only as my older sister's online alterego#we still have not the faintest idea who this random 3rd woman is or how her online presence got inter-meshed with mine
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01/30/24 - Your master has betrayed you
Has anyone else noticed technology being all wonky lately?
I went to the library the other day to print a few things. I send my images to myself via e-mail, and I forgot my little password notebook so I couldn’t log into my email. However, I had my iPad with me in case I took a last look before printing and caught something that needed to be fixed, so I figured I could just make a new temporary email and send them with that. Simple fix, no problem.
I try making a Microsoft account. They have a series of “tests” to prove you’re a human. The visual test is a seemingly random string of letters and numbers and a picture of a robot, with absolutely NO instruction as to what you’re supposed to do with them. Is it a code? Am I supposed to drag something somewhere (no, unless the dragging thing wasn’t working in my browser). So there’s an audio test. Which of three audio samples changes instruments half way through? I don’t have my headphones with me, but I’m hidden in the back of the library away from everyone anyway, I figure if I keep it on the lowest setting right up to my ear, it should be fine.
I get through the first test fine. Then it informs me there are three more to go! I don’t hear a single sample that changes instruments in the second test. I listen to it again. A woman comes in and sits at the other end of the table to work on a puzzle. I’m sitting there listening to these stupid audio samples over and over because NONE OF THEM have any instrument changes. Now I feel like an asshole because I’m not alone anymore, listening to music in a library without headphones. RUDE. And I’m getting frustrated because I’ve listened to these samples how many times, and none of them are right. So I start guessing. I make two guesses, fail both, I get to start the tests all over.
Fine, fuck Microsoft anyway.
I can’t use Yahoo, because I’ve tried it for this exact purpose and I think they might have a daily upload limit? I have three fairly large images to upload, so that’s not an option. I try AOL. I didn’t even know AOL was still a thing. Every time I try to check if the email I want is available it tells me there’s an error, try again in a few minutes.
I go to Google, search best free email providers. The first option it gives me isn’t free. The second one says it sent me a validation text. I never got the text, so I press resend, still no text.
I give up at this point. It shouldn’t take more than two minutes to make a new email, if that, and I’ve been through three different options with no success, it SHOULD NOT be this hard. I finally decide to just go home and come back the next day.
And this isn’t even like a one time thing. It’s been happening a lot lately. Very simple things just NOT WORKING. Either technology has specifically singled me out to stop working properly, or there is some kind of universal devolution of technology going on. Too many people using it and it’s starting to malfunction maybe?
Honestly, I’d be okay with that after a while, I think. There would definitely be an extraordinarily bumpy transition period, sure, but I think I would survive just fine. Take us back to the “dark ages” where technology didn’t poison everything it touches.
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HOLY SHIT I FUCKING FOUND IT.
THANK AZAR
I have spent approximately the past 60 hours trying to find Srentha's old blog. It had so many silly and fun RPs and a lot of character building stuff!
I THOUGHT I remembered remaking his blog (the one that's a sideblog to this account), renaming the old blog so I could give the New Blog the Same URL, but I couldn't remember Exactly how I'd changed the old blog's url.
I originally thought it was just a sideblog of my old personal account, but I logged in and looked at the sideblog list and nearly panicked when I couldn't find it there. (Apparently I in fact have 3 emlog blogs, though??? Should probably consolidate those someday.)
Then I remembered that, way back then, a full decade ago, I had originally made Dove and Srentha's blogs as their own accounts! So I tried to log in to his!
It took me approximately 24 hours of scrounging around in my memories to remember what I used as "his" email address and password.
(It had been 3 days of Desperately Trying to Find This Blog, so the story gets even longer and even more frustrating.)
Then, when I finally remembered I made HIS OWN EMAIL ADDRESS, and what I THOUGHT I remembered the password (I swear to Azar, I had made it the same format as Dove's password, just altering the number and the name), Tumblr wouldn't let me log in without a verification email.
Problem is, Yahoo also wouldn't let me log in to his email. Even though, 10 years later, I still remember what his ID and password were because they were so Pretty and Poetic and Distinctive that they stuck out in my memory. So I couldn't find the URL by simply logging in to the account.
(Also, I "coded" the Yahoo Security Verification Question Answers for his account. Which was a stupid thing to do because then I had to Play Detective because I forgot how I'd coded them. One of them was "Where did you meet your spouse?" And I was like, that's Dove! That's Azarath, duh! Except that wasn't it. I had invented Seranath by then; maybe that's what I used? But no. It took me approximately 3 hours and several attempts using various capitalization techniques in case it was cAsE sEnSiVe to remember I had simply called it, "home." But then it asked me "What was your first pet's name?" SRENTHA'S BIRD HAS HAD SO MANY NAMES OVER THE YEARS. Fuck if I know which one I used! I tried Janellera, Sheera, and Sieara in case I used Dove's, but then it locked me out. Bleh. I might have used Survivor, which is what his name was meant to mean. But Yahoo wouldn't let me try again.)
So just as I was about to make an act of desperation: attempt reaching out to friends who had RP'd with him to see if they still had access to any posts his old blog may have liked/reblogged and maybe The Notes Section would show me His Current URL, I remembered something crucial.
After this blog/account became my Permanent Residence, I went to check my old blog and couldn't find it. Which was Distressing, don't get me wrong. But I quickly found out Tumblr changes the URLs of blogs on old, inactive accounts (ones that aren't Fully Deleted, just unused for a period of time) by adding "-blog" at the end of the URL.
So, fairly quivering with desperation and hope, I tried that. His regular, default, years-long URL.... with "-blog" at the end.
And it came right up!
It loaded beautifully! It's all there! The old patchwork theme with silly fun pictures and all the RPs I remembered and then some, and headcanons lists I don't even remember filling out! Everything I hoped to find and more!
(If you're curious, it's at @highpriest-in-training-blog. There's a lot of Random Fun and RP Fun to go around there, but I can't log into his account At All, so it won't ever be updated, unfortunately.)
I'm so incredibly relieved, you have No Idea. It really shouldn't have been this frustrating to try logging into something WHEN I KNOW THE EMAIL AND PASSWORD! But it WAS.
But now I'm just so relieved I'm a bit emotionally exhausted. Whew,
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How to Use AOL For Your Business?

While AOL (America Online) was once a popular internet service provider and email provider, its usage has significantly declined in recent years. However, if you still wish to use AOL for your business email, you can do so. Here's a basic guide on how to use AOL for your business:
Create an AOL Account: If you don't already have an AOL account, you can visit the AOL website (https://www.aol.com) and click on "Sign Up." Follow the instructions to create an account with a unique username and password.
Set Up Your AOL Email: Once you have an AOL account, you will automatically have access to an AOL email address ([email protected]). If you prefer a custom domain email address (e.g., [email protected]), you may need to use a different email provider that offers custom domain services.
Customize Your AOL Account: Access the settings of your AOL account to customize preferences, such as changing your display name, updating your signature, and managing other account-related options.
Organize Your Inbox with Folders: AOL uses folders to organize your emails. You can create folders for different categories, projects, or clients, allowing you to sort your emails effectively.
Enable Spam and Virus Protection: AOL provides built-in spam and virus protection features. Ensure these settings are enabled to reduce the risk of receiving spam emails or opening potentially harmful attachments.
Set Up Filters: AOL allows you to create filters to automatically sort incoming emails into specific folders based on various criteria. This can help you manage your inbox more efficiently.
Use AOL Calendar (Optional): AOL offers a calendar feature that you can use to schedule and organize your business appointments and events.
Integrate with Other Apps (Optional): AOL provides integrations with other AOL-owned properties and services. However, keep in mind that AOL's ecosystem is not as extensive as other providers like Google Workspace or Microsoft Office 365.
Maintain Security: Ensure your AOL account is protected with a strong password and consider enabling two-factor authentication for an extra layer of security.
Regularly Check for Updates: Keep an eye out for AOL updates and new features that may improve your experience using the platform.
It's important to note that while AOL can be used for basic email communication, its features and functionalities may be limited compared to more modern and widely-used email providers like Gmail, Outlook, or Yahoo Mail. If you are looking for a more robust and professional email solution for your business, you might want to consider Google Workspace, Microsoft Office 365, or other email hosting services that offer custom domain support and a broader range of productivity tools.
Additionally, before committing to any email service for your business, review the terms of service and make sure it complies with your organization's needs and any applicable legal requirements.
Buy AOL Accounts from BulkAccountsBuy at https://www.bulkaccountsbuy.com/buy-aol-accounts/
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Does anyone know how to hack in to a Spotify account and change things?
My Ex changed the Email and password to my Spotify then deleted there yahoo email
Please I desperately want my Spotify back 😭
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It might possible that you’re dealing with more than one email accounts and Yahoo is one of them. Nowadays, things about Google and Outlook are coming out only, Yahoo is like an outdated service now. And that’s why if you want to know something about it, you may have to use more effective than using in other email providers like Gmail.
#how to change yahoo password#how to reset yahoo mail password#how to delete all email on yahoo#how do i change my yahoo password#how to permanently delete a yahoo account
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Have you been using the same email address and username on various platforms for twenty years?
Have you been using the same password for your accounts for twenty years?
If so, please do the following:
Go to HaveIBeenPwned.Com. In the search box, search your email address.
If the bottom of the page turns red, it means that your email is in at least one set of data from a breach.
2. Scroll down on the page to look at the breaches your email was in. I want you to look specifically for breaches that include passwords.
What this means is that your email address, which you have used as an account name for twenty years, and your password, which you have used across platforms for twenty years, are available for anyone on the web who wants to look. It's pretty easy to go and find too!
This is how a LOT of identity theft and fraud happens these days.
Let's say you created your LiveJournal account when you were fifteen. You used it a lot and by the time you were twenty the credentials you created for it were familiar and you plugged them in whenever you had to create an account. You plugged them in when you created a Facebook account. You plugged them in when you created a bank account. You plugged them in when you created the account that lets you see your lab results from your doctor's office.
All that someone has to do to seriously fuck your life is to do the following:
Find your email and password in one of these lists.
Compare to other lists and see if the same information is present
Seek out the most common account types (gmail, facebook, yahoo, hotmail, icloud, amazon, and one of about five financial institutions)
Start entering your username and password
Literally, profit.
That's all it takes. If you used the same username and password in two accounts in a breach, you probably used it elsewhere. Maybe you put an exclamation after the password, or entered your birth year, but those are pretty easy things to guess about and well worth it if someone can send themselves all the cash in your bank or order a shitload of giftcards from your amazon account.
And look: I know it 's really easy to not take warnings about passwords seriously. I know that if you haven't been screwed by this yet that it's easy to think that your password is strong enough, that you're going to get overlooked because you've got less than a hundred dollars to your name, that you're not going to have a problem with this.
People re-use passwords all the time. They re-use passwords constantly. And a lot of people don't understand that those passwords are freely available out on the internet.
Think about what would happen if someone locked you out of your primary email account and there was no way to get back in. You go to change your password on social media and what does it do? Sends a confirmation to your email, which you now don't control. Is your primary email one of the ways that you get information from your bank? Is it how you log into and track orders from online resellers? How do you log in to the profile on your phone? Do you have a browser profile? Do you log in with your email address? Does your browser profile save your credit card numbers?
This is why we use password managers. This is the advantage to password managers. With a password manager there is ONE password you have to be very careful to keep safe (the password to your password manager) and all the other passwords are disposable. Did your email get revealed in the Tumblr breach? NBD, use your password manager to generate a new, unique password for your tumblr account, change it, and you're good to go.
I know it seems like a giant pain in the ass to start using a password manager. I know it seems like a much bigger headache to log into a password manager and copy passwords than it is to type in the password that you KNOW. But I promise that using a password manager is a much smaller headache than freezing your credit so that people stop applying for credit cards in your name, or trying to start a brand new email from scratch when you get locked out of your old one, or tracking down all of the photos that someone could download from your cloud storage and making sure that they aren't getting posted on revenge porn sites.
Bitwarden is a secure, open-source password manager that has a free option for individual users. It has apps available for iOS and Android, and extensions for Firefox (which is also supported in Firefox Mobile) and Chrome. It has an extremely comprehensive tutorial series to help you learn how to use it. If you're thinking about signing up for a password manager but you're not sure, I strongly recommend checking out some of those videos.
I also promise that using a password manager gets easier the more you use it. It's a big hurdle to jump over when you're getting started, but it gets easier pretty much immediately.
And this doesn't have to be an all-or-nothing proposition. You can create an account with a password manager and just save one login to start. It's actually easiest if you keep it low-key and just update your logins whenever you find yourself needing to log in to a site instead of trying to go through and do it all at once before you're familiar with the program.
I'd recommend starting with at least two things: your primary email and your primary bank account. After that update any major online retailers you shop frequently and any social media that you use often.
A password manager is also a great place to store account recovery codes, answers to security questions, previous passwords, PINs, and secondary contact methods.
A lot of people worry that a password manager is an even bigger risk than just reusing passwords or creating memorable passwords or writing passwords down in a notebook because if a password manager is breached then all of that very important data is exposed. This is a reasonable thing to fear, and that's why it's important to be careful about what password manager you use.
This is why I recommend Bitwarden. Bitwarden uses a very secure encryption scheme and never stores any of your data in plaintext. If Bitwarden is breached and leaks data, all that will be leaked is gibberish. What you need to worry about to keep your password manager secure are the following:
Create a good, complicated, unique password for your password manager. This password DOES need to be memorable, so pick something that will be easy for you to remember. I like to use song lyrics and the year a song was released for this, so something like "Nggyu,Nglyd,Ngraady82" if we're using "Never Gonna Give You Up" as an example.
Make sure that you have secure recovery methods for your password manager; save your recovery passphrase in a safe place (I have a notebook with info like this and software activation codes and so on that I keep in my sock drawer, as well as a password protected folder on my desktop)
Only log in to your password manager from devices that you use a pin or password to log into - if you aren't doing that, at least make sure to set a short vault timeout, so that your password manager will log out after a set (short) period of time
Do not use the password for your password manager anywhere else
Do not tell anyone the password for your password manager
Make sure that your devices have good security and don't allow people remote access to your computer or devices.
Basically YOU are the only way that someone can get into your password manager. Your password is the only thing that can unlock it, which means that A) you have to ensure that you won't lose the password and B) you have to ensure that nobody else has access to the password. I know that first one sounds scary, but there are a LOT of ways to recover a Bitwarden account if you take the time to set them up. The second one is much simpler, and is the thing that is going to keep your password manager safe.
Anyway ILU please use a password manager.
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Hi I'm trying to de google my life as much as possible, please tell me about secure emails, also, no clue if you can help me with this but, I have made every account I own using gmail... is there a way to transfer that information onto a different one, or am I doomed to start over...
Feel free to ignore the second part if you don't know
Hi!
Ok, so secure email. I'll start with that makes email non secure.
Basically, gmail and most other major mainstream email providers (outlook, yahoo, etc) can (and do) read the contents of your emails, so they can use that information to advertise. Personally I think that's creepy and invasive.
So to have a secure/private email provider, they would need to know as little as possible about the contents of your emails while still being able to deliver them correctly. At first you might think 'ah, so just find a provider that says they don't read your emails!' and that would be a good start, but what then happens if they get bought or their policy changes or their database gets hacked, or they get a request from a government who may or may not be friendly to your ideology?
That's why what you want is a provider that can't, like technologically, mathematically cannot possibly read the contents of your emails. That means even if an attacker got their hands on the entire database they wouldn't have a single word of the content of your emails. To achieve that you need an encrypted email provider. They store your messages encrypted such that only your account can decrypt them.
Obviously if the other recipient of your email is still using google then google can still see it, encrypted mail works better the more people use it, so your move will improve things, and anyone you can bring with you makes it that much better.
In terms of specific providers to use, I have a strong personal preference for Proton, they do a VPN, encrypted email, encrypted calendar, and encrypted cloud storage (like google drive). I can't recommend them enough, and for average personal email use their free tier is well and truly al the functionality you need.
As for the second part of your question: moving your accounts away from your old email will vary for every account you want to move. All you'll need to do on most accounts is open up your profile settings and change the email listed, then probably go through a 'confirm your email' process like you would have when you signed up. Then your account will continue on just as it was, but the associated email will be your new one. Each one will likely take only a few minutes, but if you have 10s or 100s of accounts across the web then it starts to get a little time consuming. What I can recommend is doing the obvious ones first, and then just keeping an eye out in your day to day web surfing for accounts you haven't swapped over yet. Do them when you come across them, and you'll get through all the things you use in an average month in about a month.
(While you're doing that it's a great chance to get all your login details into a password manager and make the passwords strong and unique, if you haven't already done that! I use and recommend bitwarden but there are plenty of decent options out there)
You will find some sites are hard or even impossible to change the email on. There are a lot of reasons for that, most of them related to bad or lazy design choices on the part of the site developers. If it's something you really care about then it might be worth contacting support for the site to see if you can change it over, if not, some things will have to start over, that's unfortunately just how it is.
Hope that helps!
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