You're welcome.
HTML is a nice option to have in email, but can cause problems at times. I expect Yahoo! is injecting advertisements into these mails at random, and the ads may be interacting with the main content in ways Yahoo! has not foreseen. This kind of thing is more likely to be a problem in an email client than in a web-browser, since a full-blown web-browser has a lot of error-correcting ability. Some email clients make use of a full web browser, such as Internet Explorer, for HTML viewing--Outlook Express does that. But then that's less safe.
It's also possible to get messages in Pegasus Mail to open externally to the program in your default web-browser. That should be there as an option on the context menu, if you right-click in the body of an HTML mail. But where these messages are concerned, the HTML seems not to be important to the visual structure of the message, so the best solution is probably to read them in plaintext.
You're welcome. <DIV><BR class="khtml-block-placeholder"></DIV><DIV>HTML is a nice option to have in email, but can cause problems at times. I expect Yahoo! is injecting advertisements into these mails at random, and the ads may be interacting with the main content in ways Yahoo! has not foreseen. This kind of thing is more likely to be a problem in an email client than in a web-browser, since a full-blown web-browser has a lot of error-correcting ability. Some email clients make use of a full web browser, such as Internet Explorer, for HTML viewing--Outlook Express does that. But then that's less safe. </DIV><DIV><BR class="khtml-block-placeholder"></DIV><DIV>It's also possible to get messages in Pegasus Mail to open externally to the program in your default web-browser. That should be there as an option on the context menu, if you right-click in the body of an HTML mail. But where these messages are concerned, the HTML seems not to be important to the visual structure of the message, so the best solution is probably to read them in plaintext.</DIV>