disappearance of e-mails
Good morning!
I purchased a new computer and installed, with some difficulties, Thunderbird, that however seemed to work properly. But after some days, when opening "inbox", all e-mails appeared for a second, then disappeared. Looking for them in "waste basket", the same happened and "inbox" and "waste basket" remained empty.
This happened a couple of times, so I started moving immediately the incoming e-mails to "archives".
For some days all seemed to work properly, but this morning (23 jan 2023) the same disappearances occurred again AND "archives" had totally disappeared too!
Please, help me! Thanks in advance and regards.
모든 댓글 (3)
You purchased a new computer. Is the old one still sitting there running and downloading mail using the POP protocol? That would account for 100% of your started experience as when you set the new one up it would have defaulted to IMAP and be in sync with the server.
Found on https://support.mozilla.org/en-US/questions/1403062
jm.ferrer [https://support.mozilla.org/en-US/que.../1403062|said]
Hi, Matt, thanks for replying so quickly. All contents of my old computer have been transferred to the new a couple of weeks ago and the old one emptied for resale. As mentioned, all seemed to be ok with the new computer for the first several days. I have used Thunderbird for a number of years on the old computer and never had the slightest problem. I've hired a technician, a fine one, but he cannot understand the problem either.
I would still be looking for another device interacting with the email account. Phone, tablet or another computer.
The other alternative is Thunderbird can not actually connect to the mail server (thing like antivirus and firewall are common issues and more recently VPN's as many don't support email and many ISP providers do not support VPNs connecting from outside the ISP provided network.) When this occurs and the account type is IMAP then the contents of folders will synchronize to oblivion, even folders other than the default inbox trash etc will also go missing. Again it looks as you describe because the same mechanism is involved.