Notification Prompt Irritant
Stop the "notification" popup! It appears several times a day when I'm checking mail. Checking "Maybe Later" doesn't cut it. I already get a notification on my phone, I DO NOT NEED A DESKTOP EMAIL NOTIFICATION!!! What an annoyance!
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Andrew Figueroa
commented
Every time I visit Yahoo Mail I get interrupted 1-3 times to enable notifications. I do not and will never want to enable notifications for Yahoo Mail (or any other website).
There is a built-in browser standards compliant way to ask to enable notifications. Use that, not your own interstitial (fancy pop-up)
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Mark Perry
commented
Stop asking if I want to turn on notifications every time I log on to my account
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Mitch Miller
commented
(Please add another category of feedback)
Please stop prompting users to turn on notifications!
I get a LOT of emails on my Yahoo mail accounts and do NOT want have a notification pop up each time a message comes in.
Yahoo prompts me multiple times per day to turn on notification and the answer is NO!
I want to be able to work in peace. -
Jack Plato
commented
I am getting used to new Yahoo Mail and beginning to like the new features.What I don't like is so many times when I go to my messages in my inbox, I get a pop-up saying "Turn on Inbox Notifications." I have browser notifications turned off for a reason, I hate them because they are distracting. I know they are off, stop reminding me to enable them!
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Lawrence Loera
commented
STOP using popups to ask if I want to enable a notification EVERY time I send an e-mail. Your AI bot tells me how to turn off "desktop notification" and they're not enabled. It's annoying as **** and you need to enable an option to turn it off.
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ooter ooter
commented
I recently forwarded an email to someone. I was greeted with a giant modal popup asking if I want to turn on desktop notifications. The options were "yes" and "maybe later".
Where is the "no" option? I do not want to turn on desktop notifications, and I never will. These popups are overly pushy, and it's clear that you (like much of the tech industry) do not understand the concept of consent.