
At least Nigerian spammers used to be entertaining. I do consider THAT behavior worse than spam. Some time ago already Yandex used to harass me with automatically generated nag screens suggesting I was generating "spam". They occupy time and space and leave them empty. I didn't mind that you were Russian, but I do mind when you decide to arbitrarily end our business relationship.
#Yandex.disk search pdf
I saved everything I wanted from that account as a PDF and registered a different account with Mailfence, although I'm considering Protonmail, instead. Every email you attempt to send will reset the clock." WHAT?! How am I suppose to know when it's safe to send an email if you're not providing a clock?! Forget it. At that point, I saw a different page that said, "If we think you're a spammer, you can't try to send any email in a twenty-four hour period. That meant not only was I unable to send mail, I was unable to receive it. Nightmare! So I thought I'd register a new account (I'd been thinking of getting rid of my current one, anyway) and they immediately decided that one had been hacked, too. I tried to change my password again and discovered that my old password didn't work and LastPass somehow didn't register the new one, even after it asked if I wanted it to.

I fixed it and then discovered several hours later that it must not have taken, because every attempt to login to restore sync on my browser failed. How does one email become 500?! The system then prompted me to choose a new password because they thought I'd been hacked. Try again tomorrow." What? I looked at the help page it gave: if you send 500 emails a day, we might think you're a spammer. (I use it as a backup browser on both my laptop and mobile devices.) Today, I sent a response to a help ticket for a game and when I went to reply to help desk's reply, I got a, "You've already sent too many messages today. I've been using Yandex as a junk mail account for years, no problems loved their browser, too.
