

Today in History: 1958 Submarine Nautilus travels under Santa's home Spark! Pro series - 3rd August 2023 Spiceworks Originals.I have already cleared the cache and the credential manager on Windows and this has not solved the problem. How does this happen? Because at this moment, User2 can click on this and is granted access to User1's emails. I go to Edge and make my way to the login portal to find out that User1's 365 account is "connected to Windows" Signed user1 out of user2's excel and deactived install from User1 so user1 is no longer associated with this computer. This was allowing user2 to see user1's private documents. User1 and User2's accounts were both signed into Excel. We used one of User1's installs to install Office programs on this computer. User2 did not have a Office365 license when this computer was set up. User1 is a high permissions user and gets sensitive information and is User2's manager. There are 2 users associated with this computer. I still can't figure out exactly where the POP3 messages database is actually stored.I currently have a 3040 Micro on Windows 10. Only after following all the above steps did the problem go away. Deleting all profiles, PST files, and uninstalling/reinstalling did not solve the problem. I only know all this because I had a nasty problem where Outlook started downloading messages over POP3 and then deleting them. Delete (or just don't use) the previous PST file.bak) the folder C:\Users\\AppData\Roaming\Microsoft\Office or %appdata%\Microsoft\Office bak) the folder C:\Users\\AppData\Local\Microsoft\Office or %localappdata%\Microsoft\Office (or you can go in and only delete the sub-trees for your Outlook version if you want to keep state for other Office applications) and lots of other stuff that can haunt you. The database of which emails have already been downloaded via POP3.Some stuff that will not be reset includes. Shockingly, you can delete all your profiles and even uninstall, reboot, and reinstall Outlook and still have nasty issues that linger.
