Why I Will Never Use Yahoo Japan Again
Recently, I had one of the most frustrating and surreal experiences I have ever had with an online service. I had purchased tickets for an event through Yahoo Japanâs PassMarket system, using their recommended convenience store payment. The payment was completed, and the tickets appeared in my account.
Then, without any notice, warning, or explanation, Yahoo permanently suspended my account. I could no longer log in to retrieve the tickets I had legally purchased. When I contacted customer support, I received nothing but templated replies stating that my account was blocked due to âsuspicious activityâ and would never be restored.
What shocked me most was not only the lack of any specific reason, but the total absence of any human consideration. There was no appeal process. No one reviewed my case individually. No effort was made to confirm whether I was, in fact, a legitimate customer who had simply bought two tickets and paid properly.
This is not how a modern platform should treat users. Even companies often criticized for being âevil,â like Facebook or Google, have multiple warnings, structured appeals, and at least some level of accountability. With Yahoo Japan, it was simply: one vague accusation, instant irreversible lockout, and zero help in recovering my purchase.
Had I not decided to check my tickets days in advance, I would have shown up at the event with nothingâno proof, no recourse, no refund. This experience completely destroyed any trust I had in Yahoo Japan as a company.
Fortunately, the event organizers were kind and professional enough to verify my purchase manually and issue alternative confirmation. Their human approach stood in stark contrast to Yahooâs automated contempt for customers.
This was the last time I will ever rely on any Yahoo Japan service. If you care about your data, your purchases, or your peace of mind, I strongly recommend you do the same.








