Thanks, Eric. Active Sync is evidently Microsoft's version of IMAP. It has been around for a while and MS is apparently claiming that Active Sync is more secure for mobile devices. I tried to set up a new IMAP account with MailMate, but get no screen showing the option of OAuth2, and I'm quite sure now that Active Sync is NOT OAuth2.
Harvey ~ ~ ~ On Feb 4, 2021, at 9:00 AM, mailmate-requ...@lists.freron.com<mailto:mailmate-requ...@lists.freron.com> wrote: Date: Thu, 04 Feb 2021 00:23:24 -0500 From: "Eric Sharakan" <eshara...@gmail.com<mailto:eshara...@gmail.com>> To: "MailMate Users" <mailmate@lists.freron.com<mailto:mailmate@lists.freron.com>> Subject: Re: [MlMt] 2nd IT&IP Service Notice: Campus Email Protocols IMAP/SMTP/POP Disabled - 2/1 Message-ID: <b4b4ae90-efa1-4b6a-aa13-f17a713af...@gmail.com<mailto:b4b4ae90-efa1-4b6a-aa13-f17a713af...@gmail.com>> Content-Type: text/plain; charset="utf-8"; Format="flowed" I don't know too much about ActiveSync, but if it's Exchange 365 using so-called modern Auth (i.e. OAuth2), my experience is that MailMate r5757 works fine. You need to select OAuth2 in the "IMAP Account Settings" screen for both IMAP & SMTP. Specify outlook.office365.com<http://outlook.office365.com/> as the IMAP & SMTP Servers, enter your email address, and you'll authenticate via a window that will appear. It's possible the server side is configured to only allow specific mail clients. If that's the case, you'll see a message about MailMate not being an approved client. At that point you're at the mercy of your school and whatever policies they have in place. But it's worth a try, it might just work! -Eric
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