get rid off white list notification.
I do not want ANY ads on my email, EMAIL should be EMAIL nothing else. Make money with other means

-
Darren Shady commented
If I see one more whitelist notification, Yahoo mail is gone for good and I'll be using Gmail from now on. Ads and now this nag? STOP IT.
There are so many other free mail options. You think people are going to stick around with this new nag??
-
George commented
I would white list your freemail, but I cannot compose or type without the emails freezing up as you post memory Intensive downloaded ads with moving graphics which makes typing a *****. Not the distraction of the animation, but you can't finish a sentence. One ad of which recently downloaded contained either a virus or maleware which cause my ESET software to trigger which stopped the download.
My idea, post only static ads (Jpegps) which are very small files. Also,scan your ads for viruses and malware before accepting said.
Post only one ad at a time and only every two minutes. If you must post two ads, at least make these not the same ad.
My wife's email does not have ad block (she corresponds for both family and to my work) and without fail she's frustrated by the constant barrage of ads which prevent her from completely a single syllable word.
-
Clint Lechner commented
I will not be white-listing Yahoo mail, you ******* idiots. Stop asking.
-
Ellen Mikicich commented
Whitelist Yahoo mail?
Not.
Gonna.
Happen. -
Danyelle Howe commented
I couldn't agree more. And start blocking, protecting my email from other social media sites plundering the information shared. Even though privacy issues sometimes permit an "opt out" option from the accessibility of this information, you should be on the front lines preventing it from ever being shared without our express written consent. Email should be just as private and useful as that which is protected by USPS when in the hands of my postal carrier!
-
Sylvia Long commented
I don't want the ads
-
Edward Valeska commented
Three cheers for "Adblocker"! Ad-free at last, but consider a one-time donation for the service. So far, it's worth it!
-
Kevin Duquette commented
Please stop asking me to Whitelist you, and to change my timezone. Just let me read my mail, please.
-
Anonymous commented
With so many negative comments on white listing why do keep trying?
-
Chris R commented
im not going to white-list you. i don't want your ads during reading my emails. better how about i get my mail from my Gmail or my Hotmail the that stared it all and i don't get ads from there at all.
-
Christina Romano commented
I understand it could be whitelisted. I don't feel the need to be told everytime I log in. It will not change. Unless I quit your service, which I am tempted to do because of the white list notifications.
-
Dennis Noding commented
Title says it all
-
Elijah Collins commented
Stop asking me to disable my ad blocker or whitelist your domain, I do not see ads, I hate ads, I got rid of TV because of ads, If you continue to nag me with this screen I have no problem going to a different Email provider after having this account since 2005. No problem at all, I even have another account with Gmail I could just start using without a problem. Make your money somewhere else, stop nagging me about my adblocker.
-
T.R. Sloan commented
If you would stop spamming me with ads, I would stop using ad blocker (or at least whitelist you)
-
Paul O Donovan commented
Agree. I will move to gmail if this is not resolved
-
Joseph McGroarty commented
I don't like white list pop ups period, but at least most other sites are honest enough to admit they do them because adds make them money. Claiming that it's "interfering with our email" is just disingenuous and slimy.
-
Aaron Margosian commented
Seriously. I figured I'd be a sport and whitelist... and within two minutes, I was redirected to an "antivirus warning" that I couldn't cancel. It was like a 1990s **** site--no joke, I haven't seen anything this ****** in decades. I had to shut down the browser and clear my cache to get back in... and now ads are blocked on Yahoo mail again.
-
Sam commented
Never put ads near clickable pieces of your interface. It risks lying to the advertiser about click-throughs and risk exposing my system with malware (though your advertisers are better now).
I'll turn off adblock when the email-inlined ads are not a risk.
-
Jilida Christiansen commented
I agree with this person! In addition to using adblock to, well, avoid ads, my laptop is six years old and it can't handle ads. When too much memory is being used, my laptop overheats and shuts itself off. With email, I don't usually have that problem. Video sites, where I've whitelisted ads so I can watch the show, my computer is much more likely to shut off while the commercial is playing, but it streams the actual show fine! So am I going to whitelist ads on my email, thus drastically increasing the risk that my computer will shut down in the middle of me composing a message? I don't think so. Until I have some sort of financial guarantee that ads are going to use less memory than the content I'm pursuing, I'm keeping adblock running on my computer.
-
Cassandra Martinez commented
I got a page saying I needed to download a bs trojan killer from my own email. I turned back on all my ad blockers and security features to block all of it. I will not be getting stupid virus' and Trojans from my OWN EMAIL. I've been with Yahoo since before I was in high school and I'm almost 30 now. Quit it.