New Contributor III
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16 Messages
Successful COX to Yahoo email transition with Thunderbird
Before you start the transition, it is useful to have a separate email from another provider for testing purposes since once you start the process there is no going back and nothing will be working for a awhile. When I got the ready to go email from cox I assumed it would be days before the service would stop. My cox accounts stopped working the next day, so get on with it already.
On my PC I had Thunderbird as my POP email client and wanted to keep this. I like having my emails stored locally where they can easily be backed up. I initiated the email account transition on the yahoo mail page by entering the existing cox email address, password and generating a new yahoo password. The birthday you enter can be anything but it can't be changed later. Write everything down.
This created a new yahoo email account with the old cox address. I was able to use the Yahoo webmail interface to access the new account, and immediately received emails from yahoo. I tested sending and receiving with my 3rd party email, and after some delay these initial emails went through also. I was able to edit my default first name, last name and preferred name on the yahoo account personal info page. So much for webmail.
To get Thunderbird working I was able change my existing POP and SMTP server settings without deleting or creating a new account:
pop.cox.net -> pop.mail.yahoo.com , (SSL/TLS and port 995 unchanged)
smtp.cox.net -> smtp.mail.yahoo.com, (SSL/TLS and port 465 unchanged)
In these same tbird dialogs, my old cox username had not included the '@cox.net', so I added that (two places).
My existing password authentication setting didn't work when using the new yahoo password, so I changed both pop and smtp authentication to OAuth2.
Once I did the yahoo password dialog popped up and I completed the login and connected with the yahoo servers.
Still some things to tailor but basic email with tbird is working.
MichaelJ
Moderator
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1.8K Messages
1 year ago
Tcox,
I am happy to hear that your transition to Yahoo Email was successful and thank you for providing your first-hand experience details for our Forum members,
Mike
Cox Support Forum Moderator
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gidgey
New Contributor II
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7 Messages
1 year ago
THANK YOU! Choosing "OAuth2" from the drop down list was the key!
Here are some things I WISH I knew doing this whole messy thing, hopefully it will help others:
(I also have a question at the end, please help!)
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gidgey
New Contributor II
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7 Messages
1 year ago
Ok it won't let me edit anymore, sorry about that.
Thunderbird has these settings:
"To recover disk space, old messages can be permanently deleted, both local copies and originals on the remote server.
Don't delete any messages
Delete all but the most recent
Delete messages more than [] days old"
So, if I check "Don't delete any messages", Thunderbird will keep them forever until I delete them, correct? I assume Yahoo will then delete them according to their protocol and I won't be able to see older mails on their interface, just Thunderbird. Am I understanding correctly? THANK YOU for your help, BTW :)
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gidgey
New Contributor II
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7 Messages
1 year ago
My LAST issue is with the Thunderbird EDIT SMPT SERVER User Name constantly changing what I put in there. If the User Name isn't the same as the account I am using, it won't send the e-mail. I can change it back, but it will always change back to the last one I typed in for another account.
How do I fix this??
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Tcox
New Contributor III
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16 Messages
1 year ago
After working for a few days, my new yahoo email broke down this morning.
I can still send and receive to/from a different provider, but I can't send OR receive to/from any cox transitioned yahoo account. I made no changes on my end. I have an old email acct created originally on yahoo and it has no issues.
Hopefully this will be detected and fixed quickly since I see no way to report problems to yahoo without paying them for the privilege. Unlike google, yahoo does not seem to have a page showing known outages.
Update: The next morning some of the lost functionality is returning.
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bigbopper
New Contributor
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13 Messages
1 year ago
(Deleted dupe)
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BillNeo
New Contributor
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1 Message
1 year ago
Thank you so much for posting this. The OAuth2 was the key to getting this to work in Thunderbird (even with IMAP.)
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