An issue came up recently where the client wishes to send us signed emails, so when the program retrieves their attachments a file named 'smime.p7m' is saved instead of the file attachments. This file is not present when reviewing the email in Outlook, only the attachments we want. The only work around I found is setting up the mail account as a IMAP/POP vs letting GMAIL auto config in outlook by only supplying your username and password. My only issue with this is IMAP will ONLY send/receive of email. Sep 29, 2011 my outlook 2010 doesn't show a p7m attachment. OWA with Exchange 2007 same problem - no attachment, no save as. I copy the message with drag&drop to my filesystem. If I view the encrypted message.msg with editor there is no line per line. Sample textstring. A p p l i c a t i o n / x - p k c s 7 - m i m e. I SENT a message to someone but after sending the message, I can't seem to read the message myself. My sent message is in my Sent folder. I click on the smime.p7m file and it says: 'Do you want to add the certificate(s) from the file 'smime.p7m' to a keychain? If I click on 'View Certificates' it says: Unable to display this certificate.
cgeez
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Thanks.
Outlook 2011 Read A P7m Attachment Free
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Well, you could switch to Mail.app - as it has no problems with signed messages.
At least, I have not have had any problems with it the last 1-2 years...
Maybe PGP signing is a problem?
Mail.app even signs / encrypts the message for you if you have a certificate in your keychain... :-)
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/Marook
Outlook 2011 Read A P7m Attachments
E-mail is many things, but, unfortunately, 'safe' is not one of them.
There is an old saw that you should never send something in e-mail that you
would mind seeing on the front page of the New York Times, and that's as
true today as it was when e-mail first became popular in the 90's. E-mail
(and, in fact, all Internet traffic) travels through many servers between
your computer and its final destination, all belonging to strangers. And
while it's true that the sheer volume of e-mail that travels the 'net these
days is probably enough to keep yours safe even if someone does care enough
to snoop, I still wouldn't send a credit card number or the PIN for my ATM
card through e-mail.
This is a long-standing problem that has yet to be fully addressed by
standards, but there is a solution, albeit one that requires you and your
e-mail partner to take some steps. You can get a free digital certificate
that will allow you to digitally 'sign' your e-mails and allow others to
send you encrypted e-mail. You can also send encrypted e-mail to anyone who
sends their certificate to you.
This all sounds more complicated than it is. Basically, the steps are to
sign up for a certificate, install that certificate (handled automatically
for you by the Mac), then start using it. If someone sends you their
certificate in e-mail, you simply have to tell your e-mail program to save
it (again, handled automatically if you use Mail, and requiring one step if
you use Entourage).
You can get a free certificate from a company called Thawte
(http://www.thawte.com) and can find the complete instructions (and what is
probably a better explanation than the one I just provided) here:
<'>http://tinyurl.com/yxz7rj>;
The direct page for the free e-mail certificate is here:
<'>http://tinyurl.com/9atq7>;
This hint is nonsense. All mainstream e-mail applications will work with s/mime messages. As a previous commenter noted, Mail.app works perfectly. Also, Thunderbird works, and Entourage works, and eudora works.
I suspect that the author of this hint was using Hotmail or something. This is not a Mac hint! Hotmail doesn't read s/mime messages on windows either! Use a real e-mail client!
JP
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Pell
I have found that if you save a S/MIME e-mail message from Entourage you can open it in Mozilla to decrypt it. I have a mail rule for emails that contain smime attachments. The rule triggers an AppleScript to save the message and then open it in Mozilla. It is not the most elegant solution, but it works for the few signed e-mails I receive every month.
Well, it also works that way if you are using Claris eMailer...
Sorry, but please move over Eudora. Even Microsoft Applications can handle S/MIME nowadays. I would still suggest to keep away from Microsoftware. Instead user the wonderful Mail.app or Thunderbird!
Pepi
From http://emperor.tidbits.com/webx/TidBITS/Talk/54
Outlook 2011 Read A P7m Attachment Tool
There is no working S/MIME plugin available for current Eudora on MacOS X. Entrust's docs are pretty clear that they support up through Eudora 5.0.2 and MacOS 9. Sadly, Qualcomm's SDK for plugins also seems to be rather outdated for the Mac and seems to demand CodeWarrior. That reduces the audience for writing such a plugin, since the free dev tools for Mac OS X are perfectly suitable for that sort of work.
Eudora for Mac was neglected by Qualcomm from 2004 onwards, before they let it go completely. Perhaps it's time for the OP to update his mail client?
ft.
There is an Entrust plug-in for Eudora. We use it at work.
AFAIK the Entrust plugin is not available for private person, only companies can buy it.