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http://econsultancy.com/uk/blog/61965-yahoo-causes-a-storm-in-the-inbox-for-consumers-and-marketers
Basically, Yahoo will release "old" email accounts that haven't been used for at least a year. I can imagine that some domain owners may have used a Yahoo email account at the beginning (especially in .com) then never really thought more about it but just kept renewing the domain (or their hosting company/web designer did it for them)
So there's the prospect for somebody with malicious intent to try and pin down which Whois-associated Yahoo email accounts are no longer in use, register them, and hijack the names.
Note: this is only a problem if you've not logged into the Yahoo account in the last year - but I can imagine Yahoo could get more aggressive still in future, and shorten the lead time before re-releasing the email address.
Basically, Yahoo will release "old" email accounts that haven't been used for at least a year. I can imagine that some domain owners may have used a Yahoo email account at the beginning (especially in .com) then never really thought more about it but just kept renewing the domain (or their hosting company/web designer did it for them)
So there's the prospect for somebody with malicious intent to try and pin down which Whois-associated Yahoo email accounts are no longer in use, register them, and hijack the names.
Note: this is only a problem if you've not logged into the Yahoo account in the last year - but I can imagine Yahoo could get more aggressive still in future, and shorten the lead time before re-releasing the email address.