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Date:      Tue, 29 Dec 2009 16:53:24 +0000
From:      RW <rwmaillists@googlemail.com>
To:        freebsd-questions@freebsd.org
Subject:   Re: fetchmail and plain text password
Message-ID:  <20091229165324.791c7260@gumby.homeunix.com>
In-Reply-To: <20091229134420.GA15874@mech-cluster241.men.bris.ac.uk>
References:  <20091228151553.GA7478@mech-cluster241.men.bris.ac.uk> <20091228173515.GA27630@slackbox.xs4all.nl> <20091229111150.GA15440@mech-cluster241.men.bris.ac.uk> <19257.65081.681654.499622@jerusalem.litteratus.org> <20091229132209.GC27042@slackbox.xs4all.nl> <20091229134420.GA15874@mech-cluster241.men.bris.ac.uk>

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On Tue, 29 Dec 2009 13:44:21 +0000
Anton Shterenlikht <mexas@bristol.ac.uk> wrote:
> I might be wrong, but that's my understanding.
> So programs like fetchmail that actually connect to their
> imap server and download mail to local boxes are probably
> not very welcome.

You probably are wrong, it's more a case of your not using it's full
potential. I'm not really sure why you are doing it this way, I do
something simailar, but only because I'm interested in spam-filtering.

Why not just point your preferred mail client at the imap server?
That way you can access your mail from anywhere (probably via
webmail too)  Some imap clients, such as thunderbird and kmail, will
let you store your server passworks encrypted to a master-password, so
even root can't read them.  The IMAP server is probably more reliable
too.

If you want a local copy, or use a client with poor imap support, then
offlineimap is pretty good.


BTW personally I use  getmail instead of fetchmail, I've not used
fetchmail much, but I've read a lot of bad things about it - some of
which are mentioned here: 

http://pyropus.ca/software/getmail/faq.html#faq-about-why



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