Goodbye Yahoo Groups

Yesterday, December 15, was the last day of Yahoo groups. Those mailing lists were places where we could ask questions and be answered by others who had already solved similar problems. We also got news about things of interest to the particular group we were following.

Yes there was plenty of notice that this would happen, but still, I was not really ready, were you? Most of the groups I belonged to sent me emails telling me where they had moved to, often long ago. The top two providers chosen were Google Groups and Group.IO – you can always search each of them for your old group name and then sign up again when you find it.

However, much of that asking for help activity has long since moved to FaceBook. Personally I prefer the old style mailing lists because it is easier to find what I am looking for in their archives. Maybe I am just too 20th century still.

For genetic genealogy there is a list of Facebook groups and mailing lists at the ISOGG wiki here:
https://isogg.org/wiki/Genetic_genealogy_mailing_lists_and_Facebook_groups

Here is a list of the mailing lists I follow at their new homes:

DNA-Newbie and JewishGen are at Groups.IO.

I used to regularly send out an FAQ for DNA-Newbie which is now a page here on this blog (click for it). Of course I have been busy updating it today! Perhaps I will send it out monthly again. The idea is to answer the common Newbie questions that we see all the time.

Jewishgen uses hashtags to separate out the various areas of interest like DNA or Germany or Israel or Galicia.

While DNAadoption and Genealogy-DNA are at Google Groups:

  • https://groups.google.com/g/dnaadoption
  • https://groups.google.com/g/genealogy-dna

By the way, if you were wondering about the extension .IO, it stands for the country “British Indian Ocean Territory” and is administered by the Internet Computer Bureau, a domain name registry company based in the United Kingdom. Sounds safe to me.

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3 thoughts on “Goodbye Yahoo Groups

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  1. Kitty, I’m with you regarding the functionality of the old user mailing lists. I still occasionally find an reference to an old (sometimes 20 year old) post on the ol’ RootsWeb mailservers when I try a specific Google search. Doing the same thing in Facebook often yields a lot of frustration, IMHO.

  2. Facebook is a disaster as an information tool. Not to mention the ethical dilemmas of forcing people to be part of it in order to be informed.

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