On 3/29/21 2:51 AM, Bob Williams wrote:
On Sun, 28 Mar 2021 21:28:00 +0200 Carlos E.R. wrote:
On 28/03/2021 19.16, Doug McGarrett wrote:
On 3/28/21 6:11 AM, Carlos E. R. wrote:
Somehow I have accidentally set Thunderbird to open without a password. It's wonderful! It was a royal pita! Now in case it changes back, or if a zypper dup changes it back, I'd like to know how to do it on purpose. I have no reason to need a password for my email. I have no secrets on it, and no porn. If someone should get in and read it, so what? And there's nobody here to read it but me anyway. You are wrong. Your email can bu used to steal your identity and
On 28/03/2021 04.45, Doug McGarrett wrote: then the money in your bank or any other business with an internet presence. Or do harm to others, in your name.
My identity is listed on the outgoing mail every time. My bank information is not included in any mail, or even anywhere on my computer. I actually go to the bank when I need to deposit or cash a check, etc. That's not the problem. Someone may claim it is you by using your email.
The bank is just an example, it can be any other business unknown to you.
It can be something as simple as sending spam in your name.
And Darryl Gregorash says that the password only protects the p/w used to receive and send mail, not the contents thereof. I am not suggesting that the system logon p/w or the su - p/w should be eliminated, only the email one. Irrelevant.
Once they have your password to send and receive, they get the contents and they read them (and write them). Then they change the password and you are out.
Interesting. I use Claws-Mail rather than Thunderbird. I do not need a 'master' password in Claws-Mail, although every email account within CM needs its own login password. But that is a set once and forget operation. But from what you're saying, Carlos, I am somehow vulnerable?
It's irrelevant now. On reboot, T/B goes back to requiring password. I looked at claws mail once, but it wants information I can't supply, whereas T/B finds out for itself. Thanks for the info--doug