Yahoo randomly gives more email space

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A day before Google announced its free email service with 1,000 megabytes of storage, rival Yahoo began singling out email subscribers to get more room at no cost, too.

Yahoo confirmed on Friday that it has sent email promotions randomly to some subscribers of its popular Web-based email service. One promotion sent on Tuesday upgraded users to 100MB of disk space as of March 31 for free, and gave allowances for sending and receiving larger attachment files using Yahoo.

"As part of continuous promotional testings across the Yahoo network, we began offering some of our loyal customers various offers on Tuesday," Yahoo spokeswoman Mary Osako said. "Like most companies, we're continuously testing a variety of promotions and offers that we extend to our loyal customer base."

Google said late on Wednesday that it had developed a new free email service called Gmail that lets people search and store messages in a dramatically new fashion. Central to Gmail, set to launch in public beta in the next month, is storage enough that many people won't ever have to delete messages. Gmail's 1GB of storage is more than 100 times that offered in the free versions of Yahoo Mail and Hotmail.

Yahoo allots free mail subscribers 6MB of storage, offering 100MB for $49.99 (£27.54).

Yahoo's Osako denied that the timing of its promotion was related to Google's new service announcement. The company regularly tests promotions, she said. In November it offered some subscribers a 30-day free trial of Yahoo Premium.

Many analysts said Gmail heralds a broad expansion of Google's business and is a clear shot across the bows of Yahoo and Microsoft. Yahoo and MSN's Hotmail both sell premium mail services that feature additional storage.

Although Google has not yet made accounts available to the media, a description on its Web site said Gmail will rely on search technology to automatically organise and find messages, removing the need for file folders. With a search query, Gmail can scout out any message sent to or received by the user in its archive, showing entire strings of email conversations related to the query, according to the site. Google said the storage allotment means people will never have to delete messages.

Google plans to support the service by serving related ads on Web pages displaying email. It will scan the content of email messages to serve up targeted ads.

Talkback

It's a very good initiative. I heard about it on 'Click online'
I am about 50 years old and have been using a computer from 1985 and the Internet from 1998. The first computer that I saw was a huge one, installed at a university, right back in 1972. So the possibility of using free one gigabyte memery on-line for our e-mails is something very interesting.

via Facebook 9 April, 2004 06:49
Reply

Hmm, good or bad ? I really think that what Google has achieved so far is just to stir up things - obviously for commercial reasons as Yahoo usually does. What triggered me to write a comment was that Google intend to scan messages so they could display related ads - sounds like an awful idea - trespassing on the user's privacy. But it doesnt come as a surprise, though - the services of Google has been dropping in quality noticeably over the last year or so. I say - time for a change !

via Facebook 12 April, 2004 18:21
Reply

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