
The North Orange County Computer Club helps The Gadgetress tackle the multitude of readers cries for help. NOCCC group has experts in Windows, Word and all sorts of computer topics. The club, which meets monthly on various topics, has been in existence since 1976. Visit the club’s site at noccc.org. To get this answer delivered to your computer automatically, sign up for the e-mail update at ocregister.com/gadgetress/stump
QUESTION: For some time now I have been receiving this message from Yahoo and it seems that anything I try to do doesn’t solve this problem. I use Outlook Express. Here is the message:
Dear AT&T Yahoo! Customer,
We noticed that you are accessing email using non-secure settings in your email software. We would like to ensure that your AT&T Yahoo! Member ID, password, and email messages are transmitted securely between your mail software (such as Outlook or Outlook Express) and the AT&T Yahoo! Mail servers. In order to meet this need, please enable SSL via the instructions that are available on the Help site.
Since multiple email notifications have already been sent out about this, we request that you please make the necessary changes immediately. Remember, you need to make these changes if you want to continue to send/receive email using a mail client. Thank you for your cooperation ~ AT&T Yahoo! Customer Support
NOCCC: The main reason you have been receiving this message is an effort to make it more difficult for the bad guys to send unsolicited e-mail, a.k.a. SPAM. For years, e-mail servers used the same two ports (connection addresses #25 and #110) to send and receive e-mail. By changing those two addresses and requiring that your connection to the e-mail server be authenticated, the problem has been reduced.
AT&T has several Web help pages at helpme.att.net that can walk you through the steps to make the changes they are requesting.
For your SBCglobal.net e-mail address, the easy way to make the modifications is to download software that will make the change for you. Download the Windows-compatible software at tinyurl.com/4twlce, and the Macintosh version at tinyurl.com/6j38bv.
To manually change your e-mail program’s SSL settings, follow these steps (from AT&T’s help page):
1. Open your e-mail client program.
2. Locate the e-mail account settings for your particular client.
3. Change the POP server to pop.att.yahoo.com.
4. Change the SMTP server to smtp.att.yahoo.com.
5. Check the option labeled Use an encrypted connection (SSL).
Change the SMTP port to 465.
6. Check the option labeled Use an encrypted connection (SSL).
Change the POP3 port to 995.
7. Confirm the above settings before clicking OK.
For Outlook Express users, here is a video to help you find your account settings. I recommend you watch the entire presentation first then replay the video. Click the “Pause” icon, make the changes to Outlook Express, then return to the animation and view the next step.— Jim Sanders, president, NOCCC
For past questions sent to the PC Club, please visit the “Stump” page at ocregister.com/gadgetress/stump
Did the following:
“For your SBCglobal.net e-mail address, the easy way to make the modifications is to download software that will make the change for you. Download the Windows-compatible software at tinyurl.com/4twlce” and guess what, it did not work. We are STILL GETTING THE ERROR MESSAGE. It seems that AT&T Yahoo could just have a link that asks you if you want it fixed, answer yes a couple of times and then change it to work rather than having to do all the manual stuff, or for that matter, all the supposed downloads and then it does not work. So much for “User-Friendly!!”
I and several others I have located locally were not able to send email from Outlook Express starting Tues Oct 7. I clled for 3 days and talked to AT&T support. Thaey had me setting reseting over and over again. SMPT 25. I tried to tell them that “mail.bellsouth.net” was blocking port 25 from Outlook Express. They are still telling me I have a computer trouble. I ran Microsoft Telnet on “mail.bellsouth.net” port 25 and it is blocked by their server. I am going to try your fix in this but I don’t have Yahoo username or password. Thanks for your site. This info is great and fits with what I have been trying to tell the AT&T support people who apparently don’t know what is going on in their back yard.
Thanks Robert
In addition to the smtp and port settings, i had to go here and add my pop email addresses (you can skip the optional step 3 of “Step 3 Setup Mail Server” if you’re not going to be using att/yahoo’s webmail to send your email.
http://help.yahoo.com/l/us/yahoo/mail/original/manage/sendfrom-07.html
Brent
Atlanta