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Oct 18, 2019 @ 7:56 PM

Yahoo Groups is down, but Abovo is UP

Hi everyone, Community Manager Ying here.  👋

 

This week we got the sad news that Yahoo Groups, a great platform from the very beginning days of the Internet (2000s), is shutting down.

 

Tens if not hundreds of users will be gravely disappointed. We totally understand. We want to be here for you, for all of you. Abovo and Yahoo Groups share many similar features, so if you have been a loyal user of Yahoo Groups, we suggest you try Abovo Groups. In short, this is how we operate Abovo Groups: https://www.abovo.co/Groups.

 

Nothing will ever replace Yahoo Groups, but we hope the lively content you will find on Abovo can soothe some of the disappointment.

 

Onward and Forward,

Ying

 

 

https://www.dailydot.com/parsec/yahoo-groups-shutting-down-fandom/

 

 

 

Yahoo is shuttering Yahoo Groups. Fandom will never be the same

Since the early 2000s, Yahoo Groups were a central hub.

Sebastian Bergmann/Wikimedia

Yahoo is shutting down Yahoo Groups, a massive web of email lists and discussion forums that originally launched in 2001. Now viewed as a relic of a bygone era, it’s one of those shutdowns that prompts people to ask, “Hey, does anyone even use that any more?” But as always, the answer is yes. Plenty of people still use Yahoo Groups, and many more have personal and important content archived on the platform. Content that may soon be lost forever.

Announced quietly on a page titled “Understand what’s changing in Yahoo Groups,” the shutdown begins on Oct. 28. After that, users won’t be able to upload any new content. Then on Dec. 14, virtually everything stored on Yahoo Groups (files, photos, links, polls, conversations, etc.) will be erased, although you’ll still be able to join and email groups—all of which will now be private. Basically you have two months to trawl through your old Yahoo Groups posts and save the important stuff—but only if you know this shutdown is happening in the first place. Yahoo’s help page includes links to where you can download your data directly from your account.

- Do I have any confetti in my hair?

 

The death of Yahoo Groups is a particular blow to text-based fan communities, which thrived on the platform in the 2000s. Yahoo message boards and email lists were crucial to the early days of fandom, both as a publishing platform and as a semi-private meeting place in the days before social media sites like Tumblr, Twitter, and Reddit. Yahoo Groups were particularly integral to Harry Potter and English-language anime fandoms, overlapping with the rise of Livejournal in the early 2000s. These fannish mailing lists were home to reams of fanfiction and in-depth commentary on pop culture, and spawned lifelong friendships (and, OK, the occasional deathly feud) within their communities.

The history of internet culture is a history of lost and destroyed information, as privately owned platforms delete their content or shut down completely. Fan communities are often at the forefront of these shutdowns, either because they’re early adopters or because fanmade content suffers under censorship. Back in 2011 when Yahoo sold the bookmarking site Delicious, the new owners alienated its fandom userbase overnight by making drastic changes that eventually tanked the whole site. People left LiveJournal in droves after its new owners cracked down on queer and adult-rated content (among other issues.) The same thing happened this year with adult content on Tumblr. Fifteen or 20 years ago, smaller fanfic sites frequently shut down due to copyright claims or the logistical difficulty of fans running a website in their spare time. But Yahoo Groups stayed strong throughout.

This is, of course, where Archive of our Own comes in. This cyclical history of archival failures is what inspired the Organization for Transformative Works to launch AO3 in 2008, and since then it’s become the central hub for English-language fanfics. It also acts as a fandom-only version of the Internet Archive, rescuing old fanmade content from deletion with its Open Doors project. Moderators of fannish Yahoo Groups can contact Open Doors for help, and it looks like there are already some fandom efforts mobilizing to save Yahoo Groups content—along with, of course, the Internet Archive itself. But the end of Yahoo Groups is still on its way, with less than two weeks to go before users are blocked from posting any new material on the site.

 

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RE: Evolution of Yahoo Groups


Interesting – Yahoo is positioning the change as an evolution as opposed to a shut-down.

 

Nonetheless, the ABOVO GROUPS solution is STILL superior as it’s the web-based forum PLUS email combined – not either/or the way Yahoo Groups is evolving. :-)

 

AND, as always, ABOVO GROUPS is functional for anyone on the planet with an Email address – no Yahoo account required.

 

SPF

 

 

From: Yahoo <info@comms.yahoo.net>
Sent: Wednesday, November 6, 2019 11:10 AM
To: seanfenlon@yahoo.com
Subject: Evolution of Yahoo Groups

 

 

Yahoo!

 

 

Dear Group Moderators and Members,

Thank you for your commitment to Yahoo and for helping us define the power of digital communities. Eighteen years ago, we combined the functionality of a site called eGroups.com with a precursor community platform called Yahoo Clubs to launch Yahoo Groups. Since then, you and millions of others have helped prove our hypothesis, by creating and joining more than 10 Million groups.

A lot has changed about the Internet since 2001, including the ways most people now use Yahoo Groups. Today, most Yahoo Groups activity happens in your email inbox, not on the bulletin boards where Yahoo Groups started in the pre-smartphone age. Increasingly, people want content and connections coming directly to them, and this is why we continue to invest in Yahoo Mail -- including the recent launch of a new Yahoo Mail app that is currently the highest-rated email app in the App Store and Google Play.

So, as our users’ habits have evolved, we have begun the process of evolving our approach to help active Yahoo Groups thrive and migrate to our email platform. To help you plan for these changes, below is the schedule of how this transition will happen.

Beginning October 28, 2019:

  • Users will be able to join a Yahoo Group only through an invite from the Group Moderator or by submitting a request to join a Group, which requires approval by the Group Moderator.
  • Since we are moving Group communication from posting on message boards to email distribution, uploading and hosting of new content will also be disabled on the Yahoo Groups website.


Beginning December 14, 2019:

  • All Groups will be made private and any content that was previously uploaded via the website will be removed. We believe privacy is critical and made this decision to better align with our overall principles.
  • If you would like to keep any of the content you’ve posted or stored in the past within your Yahoo Group, please download it by December 14 by accessing this link.


As these dates get closer, we will send follow-up reminders. More information about the upcoming changes can be found here.

While this evolution of Yahoo Groups is inspired by how we see the platform being used today, we know change can be difficult. Here are a few important facts as we make this transition:

1. Yahoo Groups is not going away - We know that our users are deeply passionate about connecting around shared interests, and we are evolving Groups to better align with how you use it today.

2. New groups can still be formed - Users can continue to connect with others around their common bonds and interests. From animal rescues to sporting and activity groups, civic organizations to local PTAs, members of our Yahoo Groups will remain connected and able to share their activities and interests. All of the content that you have shared previously on the website, can continue to be shared via email.

We know that Yahoo Groups is an important online extension of your real-life group of friends, interests and communities, and we are committed to supporting communities that rely on Yahoo Groups. Thanks for coming along with us this far. We look forward to seeing where the technology -- and you -- take us in the decades to come.

Sincerely,
The Groups Team

 

 

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