

I've restarted Chrome (many times) and cleared cookies.

I do not at all think this is intended behavior by the website owner, as and suggest below, because it would be completely impractical for any website to be so configured, and bound to only annoy its users if it did. The same websites (listed above but also others I could list) constantly log me out after a mere few hours since I last logged in, while other websites (the remaining 50% of them or so) keep me logged in, as per the checked tickbox in the login form. I am on Windows 10 and let Chrome update itself (currently at v.90).ĮDIT Sep 2021: Meanwhile Chrome is at. I just found out it can do Facebook via a script, which i tested in case it would solve the conflict, but when i go there through x-notifier it won't load another extension (Social Fixer) which makes Facebook usable to me, so that's unacceptable. What can I do to diagnose it? The only way I'd know how to do this is to disable each extension (add-on) at a time to see if any one of them is at fault, but that would take quite a while. There isn't really a problem with being logged out of any mail servers except Gmail. I used to think this is a problem with those former websites, but I realise it probably has to do with Chrome itself.

Strangely, this problem happens only with certain websites (among them,, leo.org, oebb.at) but not with others (such as the StackExchange sites, or the Google sites such as Gmail/YouTube) This happens even if the previous visit was recent I suspect the critical action is the restarting of the browser rather than time elapsed. Even so, very often when I go back to some of these websites, I find I am logged out and need to log back in every time. I am logged into several websites, all of them with the "stay logged in" tickbox checked. Google claims that this is done for the safety of your account, but it seems to me that Outlook shouldn’t necessarily be on the list of risky apps.I use Chrome on a personal PC on which I am the only user. If after doing this, Google still seems to be blocking Outlook from accessing Gmail, then you will need to change some settings in Google, not in Outlook. If you do it the other way around, the 587 may revert back to Port 25 which can cause connectivity issues. The trick here is to choose TLS in the Outgoing server encrypted connection menu before typing ‘587’ in the Outgoing Server.
