On 8/29/07 at 8:46 AM, PowerMail Engineering ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) said:

>The Monster Team wrote:
>
>>When I try to send email via my primary email account, I get the
>>following error message:
>>
>>    A network interface error occurred
>>    Class=NetP; what=4; when=1
>
>This is an authentication error. Make sure you have provided the user
>and password in the sending tab of the account dialog, if your SMTP
>server is configured to require authentication. Verify that the server
>does not require SSL/TLS, or that you have enabled it in the accounts dialog.
>Verify also in "Mail schedulings and locations", in the location tab, if
>you have configured a global SMTP settings for all your mail accounts.

Jérôme,

Thanks for the response. The SMPT settings are identical to how they
have been for the last several years, and also identical to the settings
for several other accounts on that server.

This broke the other day when I had to let my ISP have access to my
mailbox to run a test. I quit PM, logged into the web admin for my
mailbox and changed the password, and gave them access. When they were
done, I logged into the web admin for the account, changed the password
back, and then launched PM.

Nothing in PM changed - it wasn't even running, yet I'm now getting this
authentication error. The only thing I changed was my password, and I
changed it back - if I hadn't changed it back successfully, I wouldn't
be able to fetch mail on that account, and I can.

Which is just... weird.

My ISP (reasonably intelligent folks over there, really) say that
they've put everything back on their side.

Can you think of *anything* that this could be? Anything out of the
ordinary? Everything normal or expected appears to be correct.

Thanks,

Steve


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