Join the AMA (Ask Me Anything) with the Firefox leadership team to celebrate Firefox 20th anniversary and discuss Firefox’s future on Mozilla Connect. Mark your calendar on Thursday, November 14, 18:00 - 20:00 UTC!

搜尋 Mozilla 技術支援網站

防止技術支援詐騙。我們絕對不會要求您撥打電話或發送簡訊,或是提供個人資訊。請用「回報濫用」功能回報可疑的行為。

了解更多

Thunderbird automatically logs me onto my gmail account; I do not want my password saved anywhere. I need to delete the saved password each time. How to stop?

  • 4 回覆
  • 2 有這個問題
  • 1 次檢視
  • 最近回覆由 christ1

more options

I want to be prompted for my password, every time I log into my Gmail account. But Thunderbird automatically saves my password to oauth://accounts.google.com ... and signs me in. So each time I need to delete the password from the security/passwords/Saved Logins screen. Is there some way to stop this automatic saving of the password?

I want to be prompted for my password, every time I log into my Gmail account. But Thunderbird automatically saves my password to oauth://accounts.google.com ... and signs me in. So each time I need to delete the password from the security/passwords/Saved Logins screen. Is there some way to stop this automatic saving of the password?

被選擇的解決方法

What exactly do you want to happen? What is happening now that you don't want to happen?

You may get closer to what you want if you were to set up a Master Password. Then Thunderbird will not be able to connect to any servers until that Master Password is entered.

從原來的回覆中察看解決方案 👍 0

所有回覆 (4)

more options

With OAuth2 no password is saved in Thunderbird. It is an authentication token which will expire at some point. Upon expiry you'll be prompted for the password again.

more options

Thank you. So, the answer is that i must manually delete the "authentication token" each time, to prevent a valid login the next time Thunderbird is opened. I left the token overnight and it had not expired by the next day. Do you know how long the token is valid?

more options

選擇的解決方法

What exactly do you want to happen? What is happening now that you don't want to happen?

You may get closer to what you want if you were to set up a Master Password. Then Thunderbird will not be able to connect to any servers until that Master Password is entered.

more options
So, the answer is that i must manually delete the "authentication token" each time, to prevent a valid login the next time Thunderbird is opened.

That sounds pretty silly. Perhaps you can explain what you're trying to achieve in the first place.