29.Nov.2007 at 8:57 am | hso
Top Reasons to not use Yahoo! Hosting
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I try not to write such posts, but the frustrations expressed by my clients who host on Yahoo! Small Business compels me to point out the obvious shortcomings. This non-exhaustive list is in no particular order, it’s just the top 4 reasons why I would not recommend/host any site on Yahoo!
One-Click-Install
A client recently used the one click install feature to add WP to her site, within days it was hacked and she lost everything she had moved from another CMS (luckily she had backups). The problem was the defunct version of WP that Yahoo! installs, WP version 2.0.2, which beats Al Gore’s WP version. Yahoo! claim to be partners with WordPress.org and provide search capabilities for that site, yet the version they install on hundreds of user sites is full of holes and prone to malicious hijacks.
phpMail
This is a very funny yet restrictive setup that Yahoo! Hosting has in place to screw users form using phpMail functions. For example, the standard flair for any new WP site is a contact form, Yahoo! wont allow you to use one. The only situation it would work is if the from email ID entered in the Contact Form is from the same domain as the site you are on. For example, if you are setting up example.com the only people who can use the contact form are those with a someone@example.com email ID. Does that even make sense? Their reason is, if you had access to send emails to and from your site, you might use the privilege to spam everyone. Privilege to Spam? Yahoo! assume that its subscribers are spammers and treat them like one irrespective of if you really are one or not. While there are ways around this issue, but it is not worth the time and effort.
.htaccess
Although this feature is for advanced users, they don’t let users have access to it. This means, you are not allowed to set up redirects, and it you do manage to or set one up within the WP install, Yahoo! will delete the file and if you are the ‘unlucky types’, it might even kick you out of the system completely without the opportunity to restore/reverse to that portion of the site, period.
Customer Support
I recently called Yahoo! on behalf of a client and was on hold a good 50+ minutes just to hear the guy on the other end tell me he will “get the engineers to look at the issue the next morning” and that “the issue will be resolved in 3 to 5 days”. I replied (in astonishment) “3 to 5 days?” and he replied very calmly, “that’s less than a week” (almost confirming that he actually knows something). Obviously Yahoo! Hosting thinks your site is not important and can wait a 5-day downtime. After all, why bother rushing their engineer to look into petty matters when they could be spending it on keeping the number 1 site in the world up.
Need more?
I’ll let the readers add the rest using the comment form below.





1. onebizymama | December 4, 2007 #
That is soo rite! I ended my hosting with Yahoo last year because it wasn’t flexible. Even the domain registration is quite complicated, and charging another $$ for the security hidden whois.