OK...

It's clearly possible to create keychain entries that Safari can't  
read, as evidenced by all the other apps that don't lose their  
passwords when Safari is reset.  Why does Camino create entries that  
Safari can read?

Thanks for answering my questions about this.


On Mar 10, 2008, at 10:12 AM, Stuart Morgan wrote:

> On Mar 9, 2008, at 8:08 AM, Noemi wrote:
>
>> Wait, resetting *Safari* causes one to lose Camino passwords?  *Mind
>> boggles.*  Is that going to be a permanent "feature"?
>
> We use the standard OS password storage system as it is intended to be
> used, which is a feature, and is permanent. As for whether Safari will
> always choose to remove anything in that store that it can read
> (rather than just things it created, as Camino does) is something
> you'd have to ask Apple, since we don't control Safari development.
>
> -Stuart
> _______________________________________________
> Camino mailing list
> Camino@mozdev.org
> https://www.mozdev.org/mailman/listinfo/camino

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