Are you sure that we are talking about Safari and not about IE5 for Mac? > > If Safari has some option to show stored cookies and their values, trigger > login error and check stored cookie values. Or compare good 'key' cookie > with bad 'key' cookie value. Cookie should be random string. Same byte > length as your password. If it has more than that, then Safari fails to > detect secure cookie header part. > > If Safari worked before, what was changed on webserver? Was PHP upgraded > or changed to different type (DSO, CGI, FastCGI)? Was website switched > from HTTP to HTTPS? > Yep Safari 5.1 and Firefox 6. something Nothing has changed on the server except for introduction of SM turning the option off as u suggested seems to have worked with those I don't have IE even installed anymore I am dealing with some issue with folders.. but beyond that things are behaving... -- View this message in context: http://old.nabble.com/Squirremail-and-Safari-5.0-tp32615996p32621451.html Sent from the squirrelmail-users mailing list archive at Nabble.com. ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ All of the data generated in your IT infrastructure is seriously valuable. Why? It contains a definitive record of application performance, security threats, fraudulent activity, and more. Splunk takes this data and makes sense of it. IT sense. And common sense. http://p.sf.net/sfu/splunk-d2dcopy2 ----- squirrelmail-users mailing list Posting guidelines: http://squirrelmail.org/postingguidelines List address: squirrelmail-users@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx List archives: http://news.gmane.org/gmane.mail.squirrelmail.user List info (subscribe/unsubscribe/change options): https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/squirrelmail-users