As Yahoo's embattled email service suffers through a slew of bad news, including a hack that compromised more than 500 million accounts, some users are finding it hard to leave.
Automatic email forwarding was disabled at the beginning of the month, several users told The Associated Press. While those who've set up forwarding in the past are unaffected, some who want to leave over recent hacking and surveillance revelations are struggling to switch to rival services.
(Also see: Yahoo Disputes Report on E-Mail Scanning for US Government)
"This is all extremely suspicious timing," said Jason Danner, who runs an information technology business in Auckland, New Zealand, and is trying to quit Yahoo after 18 years with the email provider.
Yahoo initially declined to comment on the recent change beyond pointing to a three-line notice on Yahoo's help site which says that that the company temporarily disabled the feature "while we work to improve it."
After the AP published this story, the company issued a statement saying Yahoo was working on getting automatic forwarding "back up and running as soon as possible."
In the meantime, the company said it continued to support other options such as multiple account management , which allows users to juggle several email services at once.
Like forwarding postal mail, email forwarding makes sure users don't miss important messages as they swap one address for another. The feature has been "a basic concept for 15 years for just about every email provider out there," said Brian McIntosh, who owns a small technology business and first alerted The Associated Press to the issue.
(Also see: Yahoo Hack Was Not State-Sponsored, Claims Security Firm)
"All of a sudden it's under development," McIntosh said in a telephone interview. "And only at Yahoo."
Yahoo's users have been hit by a one-two punch of disclosures. First, the company revealed in September that hackers stole the personal information of roughly a half billion people, a record-breaking theft that appeared to have gone undiscovered for some two years. More recent revelations concern reports that Yahoo opened its users' emails to government surveillance .
Although it's unclear whether either issue will lead to a real exodus from Yahoo, several people told AP they were leaving or had already left the service because of the negative headlines.
"Being an American, I think there's a certain amount of expectation that some surveillance goes behind the scenes all the time," said Merissa Silk, an expatriate mobile product manager living in Sydney. "But providing the US government unrestricted access - that really, really violates our privacy."
Silk has skipped the email forwarding, instead leaving an out-of-office message on her Yahoo account which provides her new address and reads in part: "Following recent data and privacy breaches, I will be discontinuing use of Yahoo Mail."
(Also see: Yahoo Hack: Ripple Effects Could Extend Well Beyond)
For those seeking more than an out-of-office message to manage their old inbox, Yahoo's decision to disable email forwarding is a source of frustration.
McIntosh said his business, which is located in Canada Lake, New York, would have to delay a client's planned transition to a Microsoft email provider. Danner said Yahoo's decision to suddenly do away with such a "basic function" left him dumbfounded.
"That all this ... has ceased to function when they've been getting a lot of press seems extremely dubious to me," he said in a phone call.
For the latest tech news and reviews, follow Gadgets 360 on X, Facebook, WhatsApp, Threads and Google News. For the latest videos on gadgets and tech, subscribe to our YouTube channel. If you want to know everything about top influencers, follow our in-house Who'sThat360 on Instagram and YouTube.