Outlook 2013, multiple email accounts and encrypted email: Only last S/MIME settings used
up vote
3
down vote
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I have multiple email accounts properly setup in Outlook 2013 (can send/receive fine otherwise). Lets say they are:
user1@domain1.com
user2@domain2.com
user3@domain3.com
All belong to me and I have 3 separate SMIME certificates for these, installed into the Windows Certificate Store.
I even have 3 separate profiles in Outlook 2013 in the "Settings" section (via
File => Options => Trust Center => Trust Center Settings => E-mail Security).
Issue: Outlook 2013 selects the last profile as the "Default setting" (say user3@domain3.com
) and then applies this to all emails I send out, even from user1@domain1.com
and user2@domain2.com
!!! This is ridiculous!
Required:
Obviously, When I send an email from my
- user1@domain1.com account, I want certificates from user1@domain1.com to apply.
- user2@domain2.com account, I want certificates from user2@domain2.com to apply
- user3@domain3.com account, I want certificates from user3@domain3.com to apply
Question: How can I tell Outlook 2013 to properly map these accounts => SMIME settings/certificate relationships?
There is also a posting on two of MSFT's message boards, but the moderators are being lazy by asking the poster to message on the "other" message board. The actual issues was addressed on neither (!).
- MSFT message board #1
- MSFT message board #2
microsoft-outlook certificate microsoft-outlook-2013 smime
add a comment |
up vote
3
down vote
favorite
I have multiple email accounts properly setup in Outlook 2013 (can send/receive fine otherwise). Lets say they are:
user1@domain1.com
user2@domain2.com
user3@domain3.com
All belong to me and I have 3 separate SMIME certificates for these, installed into the Windows Certificate Store.
I even have 3 separate profiles in Outlook 2013 in the "Settings" section (via
File => Options => Trust Center => Trust Center Settings => E-mail Security).
Issue: Outlook 2013 selects the last profile as the "Default setting" (say user3@domain3.com
) and then applies this to all emails I send out, even from user1@domain1.com
and user2@domain2.com
!!! This is ridiculous!
Required:
Obviously, When I send an email from my
- user1@domain1.com account, I want certificates from user1@domain1.com to apply.
- user2@domain2.com account, I want certificates from user2@domain2.com to apply
- user3@domain3.com account, I want certificates from user3@domain3.com to apply
Question: How can I tell Outlook 2013 to properly map these accounts => SMIME settings/certificate relationships?
There is also a posting on two of MSFT's message boards, but the moderators are being lazy by asking the poster to message on the "other" message board. The actual issues was addressed on neither (!).
- MSFT message board #1
- MSFT message board #2
microsoft-outlook certificate microsoft-outlook-2013 smime
add a comment |
up vote
3
down vote
favorite
up vote
3
down vote
favorite
I have multiple email accounts properly setup in Outlook 2013 (can send/receive fine otherwise). Lets say they are:
user1@domain1.com
user2@domain2.com
user3@domain3.com
All belong to me and I have 3 separate SMIME certificates for these, installed into the Windows Certificate Store.
I even have 3 separate profiles in Outlook 2013 in the "Settings" section (via
File => Options => Trust Center => Trust Center Settings => E-mail Security).
Issue: Outlook 2013 selects the last profile as the "Default setting" (say user3@domain3.com
) and then applies this to all emails I send out, even from user1@domain1.com
and user2@domain2.com
!!! This is ridiculous!
Required:
Obviously, When I send an email from my
- user1@domain1.com account, I want certificates from user1@domain1.com to apply.
- user2@domain2.com account, I want certificates from user2@domain2.com to apply
- user3@domain3.com account, I want certificates from user3@domain3.com to apply
Question: How can I tell Outlook 2013 to properly map these accounts => SMIME settings/certificate relationships?
There is also a posting on two of MSFT's message boards, but the moderators are being lazy by asking the poster to message on the "other" message board. The actual issues was addressed on neither (!).
- MSFT message board #1
- MSFT message board #2
microsoft-outlook certificate microsoft-outlook-2013 smime
I have multiple email accounts properly setup in Outlook 2013 (can send/receive fine otherwise). Lets say they are:
user1@domain1.com
user2@domain2.com
user3@domain3.com
All belong to me and I have 3 separate SMIME certificates for these, installed into the Windows Certificate Store.
I even have 3 separate profiles in Outlook 2013 in the "Settings" section (via
File => Options => Trust Center => Trust Center Settings => E-mail Security).
Issue: Outlook 2013 selects the last profile as the "Default setting" (say user3@domain3.com
) and then applies this to all emails I send out, even from user1@domain1.com
and user2@domain2.com
!!! This is ridiculous!
Required:
Obviously, When I send an email from my
- user1@domain1.com account, I want certificates from user1@domain1.com to apply.
- user2@domain2.com account, I want certificates from user2@domain2.com to apply
- user3@domain3.com account, I want certificates from user3@domain3.com to apply
Question: How can I tell Outlook 2013 to properly map these accounts => SMIME settings/certificate relationships?
There is also a posting on two of MSFT's message boards, but the moderators are being lazy by asking the poster to message on the "other" message board. The actual issues was addressed on neither (!).
- MSFT message board #1
- MSFT message board #2
microsoft-outlook certificate microsoft-outlook-2013 smime
microsoft-outlook certificate microsoft-outlook-2013 smime
asked Aug 1 '13 at 0:42
DeepSpace101
3,94093746
3,94093746
add a comment |
add a comment |
2 Answers
2
active
oldest
votes
up vote
0
down vote
I just found the answer for this:
File > Options > Trust Center > Trust Center Settings > E-mail Security > Settings
Create a new "Security Settings Name" for each of your certificates. When you send a signed or encrypted mail, just make sure the certificate selection is set on "automatic" in:
Properties > Security Settings
add a comment |
up vote
0
down vote
I think the problem is that, when you create the separate profile settings for each S/MIME certificate, there's a checkbox within the profile that is enabled by default - this says that each profile is the default profile for signing/encrypting all e-mails. If you create two profiles, each of which state they are the default certicates (effectively 2 default certificates), by default, Outlook is creating a conflict.
I just went into the Security Center and unchecked the default setting checkbox in both profiles, then went to test. SUCCESS!!!!
I now have two separate Exchange/Office 365 accounts configured in Outlook 2013, each of which are using their respective S/MIME certificates.
Thanks for the hint!!! That was what allowed me to finally figure out an issue I've encountered for years! :-D
add a comment |
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2 Answers
2
active
oldest
votes
2 Answers
2
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
up vote
0
down vote
I just found the answer for this:
File > Options > Trust Center > Trust Center Settings > E-mail Security > Settings
Create a new "Security Settings Name" for each of your certificates. When you send a signed or encrypted mail, just make sure the certificate selection is set on "automatic" in:
Properties > Security Settings
add a comment |
up vote
0
down vote
I just found the answer for this:
File > Options > Trust Center > Trust Center Settings > E-mail Security > Settings
Create a new "Security Settings Name" for each of your certificates. When you send a signed or encrypted mail, just make sure the certificate selection is set on "automatic" in:
Properties > Security Settings
add a comment |
up vote
0
down vote
up vote
0
down vote
I just found the answer for this:
File > Options > Trust Center > Trust Center Settings > E-mail Security > Settings
Create a new "Security Settings Name" for each of your certificates. When you send a signed or encrypted mail, just make sure the certificate selection is set on "automatic" in:
Properties > Security Settings
I just found the answer for this:
File > Options > Trust Center > Trust Center Settings > E-mail Security > Settings
Create a new "Security Settings Name" for each of your certificates. When you send a signed or encrypted mail, just make sure the certificate selection is set on "automatic" in:
Properties > Security Settings
edited Mar 21 '14 at 11:58
Matthew Williams
3,99382036
3,99382036
answered Mar 21 '14 at 11:09
Eric
1
1
add a comment |
add a comment |
up vote
0
down vote
I think the problem is that, when you create the separate profile settings for each S/MIME certificate, there's a checkbox within the profile that is enabled by default - this says that each profile is the default profile for signing/encrypting all e-mails. If you create two profiles, each of which state they are the default certicates (effectively 2 default certificates), by default, Outlook is creating a conflict.
I just went into the Security Center and unchecked the default setting checkbox in both profiles, then went to test. SUCCESS!!!!
I now have two separate Exchange/Office 365 accounts configured in Outlook 2013, each of which are using their respective S/MIME certificates.
Thanks for the hint!!! That was what allowed me to finally figure out an issue I've encountered for years! :-D
add a comment |
up vote
0
down vote
I think the problem is that, when you create the separate profile settings for each S/MIME certificate, there's a checkbox within the profile that is enabled by default - this says that each profile is the default profile for signing/encrypting all e-mails. If you create two profiles, each of which state they are the default certicates (effectively 2 default certificates), by default, Outlook is creating a conflict.
I just went into the Security Center and unchecked the default setting checkbox in both profiles, then went to test. SUCCESS!!!!
I now have two separate Exchange/Office 365 accounts configured in Outlook 2013, each of which are using their respective S/MIME certificates.
Thanks for the hint!!! That was what allowed me to finally figure out an issue I've encountered for years! :-D
add a comment |
up vote
0
down vote
up vote
0
down vote
I think the problem is that, when you create the separate profile settings for each S/MIME certificate, there's a checkbox within the profile that is enabled by default - this says that each profile is the default profile for signing/encrypting all e-mails. If you create two profiles, each of which state they are the default certicates (effectively 2 default certificates), by default, Outlook is creating a conflict.
I just went into the Security Center and unchecked the default setting checkbox in both profiles, then went to test. SUCCESS!!!!
I now have two separate Exchange/Office 365 accounts configured in Outlook 2013, each of which are using their respective S/MIME certificates.
Thanks for the hint!!! That was what allowed me to finally figure out an issue I've encountered for years! :-D
I think the problem is that, when you create the separate profile settings for each S/MIME certificate, there's a checkbox within the profile that is enabled by default - this says that each profile is the default profile for signing/encrypting all e-mails. If you create two profiles, each of which state they are the default certicates (effectively 2 default certificates), by default, Outlook is creating a conflict.
I just went into the Security Center and unchecked the default setting checkbox in both profiles, then went to test. SUCCESS!!!!
I now have two separate Exchange/Office 365 accounts configured in Outlook 2013, each of which are using their respective S/MIME certificates.
Thanks for the hint!!! That was what allowed me to finally figure out an issue I've encountered for years! :-D
answered Apr 6 '15 at 16:59
JeffH
1
1
add a comment |
add a comment |
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