GuidoL Good advice. Deactivating and reactivating can also help with biometric logins. I recently had the problem that I couldn’t log in to mobile banking with the biometric login (Face ID). Deactivating and reactivating the biometric login was the solution.
Tabalug Another thing that comes to mind is that there have been a lot of complaints about Outlook recently.
I myself recommend using Thunderbird. Maybe you would like to try Thunderbird too.
Why do you do this to yourself and install such unnecessary and problem-causing Norton rubbish?
What do you expect from it?
The biggest danger is still sitting in front of the keyboard and screen, no AI and no Norton company can help.
P.S. The colloquial expression in IT is: Norton the yellow plague.
Here is the explanation:
Norton used to be a great company until it was bought by Symantec. Then the well-known name of the company Norton was used for the security products for home users and has been rightly disreputable for 24 years as the yellow plague.
So, to answer your question, yes, Norton AntiVirus Plus, Norton 360 Standard, Norton 360 Deluxe, Norton 360 Premium can recognise, delete and disinfect viruses, Trojans, malware, malicious software, cracks, keygens and ransom Trojans! But all of it worse than the competition! And with errors and consequences **which the name Yellow Plague aptly describes as a clear warning for these poor products!
The known problem with the combination of Outlook and Norton is not the VPN connection at all, but the attempt of the Norton virus scanner to hook into Outlook’s communication with the Internet with a “man-in-the-middle attack”, which Microsoft and also Outlook have been classifying as a clear malware attack attempt for some time, and therefore also reject such attempts within Outlook as clearly hostile.
The solution to the whole problem has already been mentioned in previous posts, namely simply uninstall Norton with its large malware content.
And if you still want to have an external VPN provider, you should not subscribe to a combination package with a third-party virus scanner, but a pure VPN provider.
Preferably a reputable one, such as the Swiss provider Proton, which has already proven itself with its free services and can offer a lot more if you also select the payment options, and no matter which option you choose, Outlook will certainly never be blocked.
© @Werner