In article <0a0077825d87834e8e0008f0150350c54aa0f...@prodmbx02.pfsweb.com> you 
write:
>> To be fair. If you use good password management (ie passwords only used in 
>> one place), then there is no practical difference between
>forwarding all your mail to gmail and telling gmail the > POP3 password. Both 
>situations let Google see all your email, and nothing else.

>

>You're completely ignoring the (very common) situation of an AD-integrated 
>network; even if my password is only used for my company, my
>password grants access to email, calendar, IM, sharepoint, file servers, etc. 

This is why well designed systems can issue app passwords.  I have a
bunch of different applications that can pick up my Yahoo mail, but
they all have different passwords and that password only lets them
pick up mail, not the other zillion Yahoo things.

R's,
John

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