Details of the dormancy policy changes. [Photo: Naver]

Naver said on March 19 it has overhauled its mail service dormancy policy and will implement it from May 7. It said it refined the standards so users can clearly understand the dormancy criteria and eased the transition period.

The biggest change is that the standards for applying and lifting dormancy will shift from Naver login to access to Naver Mail. Access via PC, mobile web, app, POP3, IMAP and SMTP will all be included.

The period will also be eased. Previously, accounts were moved to first-stage dormancy if there was no access for more than three months, or 90 days, but after the revision they will be processed as dormant if there is no access for more than six months, or 180 days. The names will also change to make them more intuitive. The existing first-stage dormancy and second-stage dormancy labels will be changed to "Dormant" and "Reset", respectively.

Once moved to a dormant state, mail receipt will stop, messages will be returned, and scheduled outgoing mail will be cancelled. POP3, IMAP and SMTP functions will be switched to "Not in use."

If there is no mail access for more than three years, or 1,095 days, and the account becomes "Reset," the mailbox and settings information will be reset to the initial sign-up state. Dormant and Reset status will be lifted when the user accesses Naver Mail.

Naver will set a grace period from the effective date during which logging into the Naver portal will also be recognised as access, as before.

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#Naver #Naver Mail #POP3 #IMAP #SMTP
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