Yahoo is no more, but what's that mean for my Yahoo Fantasy Sports?

So Yahoo, the company, has bitten the dust.

Verizon now officially owns the one-time Web portal, paying $4.48 billion, and 
is merging Yahoo with AOL to create a new entity called Oath, which resides 
within Verizon's media and telematics group.

But what does that mean to the 1 billion or so users of popular features such 
as Yahoo Mail, Yahoo Finance and Tumblr? For now, thankfully, not much.

Users of Yahoo and AOL brands can find clickable links to all their favorite 
destinations on the Oath home page. But the traditional paths to Yahoo Mail, 
Yahoo Finance, Tumblr and AOL.com still work as they always have.

Some questions Yahoo users might have:

Q: Will the email address on my longtime Yahoo Mail account change?

A: Not as of now. Oath CEO Tim Armstrong, the former CEO of AOL, said recently 
the Yahoo brands -- including Yahoo Mail -- are not going away. If you haven't 
logged in lately, Yahoo has asked users to change their passwords in the wake 
of separate hacks impacting impacted more than 500 million and 1 billion 
accounts.

Q. What about Yahoo Fantasy Sports?

A. Those games won't be rebranded as "Oath Fantasy Baseball" as of now. Yahoo 
Sports properties are very popular and are not expected to disappear.

Q. Might any other Oath brands change into something else?

A: Armstrong has described Oath as a B2B entity, an umbrella brand over the 
names you are already familiar with -- services such as Tumblr and Flickr and 
outlets such as HuffPost, Engadget and TechCrunch.

Overall, about 1.3 billion consumers use the company's collection of 50-plus 
brands, making them some of the most powerful online destinations.

For now, those long-loved brands such as Yahoo Finance and Flickr -- and AOL 
Mail -- remain. AOL and Yahoo, the corporate brands "go away" to be replaced by 
Oath under Verizon, says Caroline Campbell, senior vice president for brands 
and communications at AOL.

"No properties are going away from either company -- and we will invest in 
them," she said.

But Oath, itself, "is not a consumer brand," Armstrong told CNBC two months 
ago. "Over time, if there is brands we can create around Oath we will think 
about that, but the most important brands we have are things like Yahoo 
Finance, Yahoo Sports, Tumblr and Huffington Post."


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