For one, Yahoo! has recently been trying to change things way to much. If it is not broken don't fix it! If it is broken, FIX IT! Yahoo! appears to be going about this backwards.
Recently The Think Tank has been being instructed by Yahoo! that they "will not be able to sign in to Yahoo! services unless [they] provide the requested information on this form."
If you are like The Think Tank and don't want to give Yahoo! more information, know that there is hope and help! The "requirement" can be waived by a simple click of a button. Simply clear your computer's cache and delete the cookies. The Think Tank likes to make things a little faster.
Here, the settings on FireFox have been adjusted so that when FireFox closes, everything is cleared. This is a great fix, as the next time you open Yahoo! tries to require something from you, simply close the window and open FireFox again, now you can log in as normal.
The Think Tank likes to have anywhere from 2 to 30+ windows open at a time. The advice above is not helpful if you have more than one window open. To solve this, The Think Tank either opens Yahoo! accounts first or last. Never during the middle of an online session, as they never known when Yahoo! will try to "obligate" them to give more information. Clearing the computer's cache impacts all windows. Making it so you have to login to your accounts again.
We understand that Yahoo! wants to make things better. However, Yahoo! is becoming less desirable. Their "search" engine for looking for emails is hit and miss. Sometimes it finds the email and other times it does not.
Spam flies through the spam filter at Yahoo! like it is nothing, even though Yahoo! is supposed to be sporting an "Award-winning security and spam protection." More spam is received in The Think Tank's Yahoo! inboxes than any other account, period. The painstaking process of sorting junk out of an inbox is almost annoying enough to abandon an account altogether.
If Yahoo! is listening. Stop trying to obligate us to give you more information and do try to solve the issues at hand. All the bells and whistles that you are adding to people's Yahoo! accounts are more like a band-aid to hide the real problem. Sure, the band-aid looks cool, with all the flashy lights and new things added to make things "easier." However the infected area is only getting worse and people are opening new accounts in greener pastures. Take a hint from Google, make the changes options, not mandatory. Google offers hundreds of different combinations of their settings, themes, etc... that their users can freely choose from. With a Gmail account one has the freedom to make their account, their own.