How can I disable Outlook without deleting and reinstalling, to forestall customs officers' seeing emails?











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My MS Outlook contains emails that can be accessed even when offline, much less automatically updates my email when connected to any Internet.



Please recommend a method more efficient than deleting Outlook before I cross a border, and reinstalling Outlook afterwards, every time that I travel?










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  • You do the same thing you should do to prevent anyone from looking at your stuff. Encrypt the hard drive and use a strong password.
    – Appleoddity
    Dec 5 at 1:40










  • US and other customs offices have the right to impound devices and/or demand passwords.
    – DrMoishe Pippik
    Dec 5 at 2:56










  • You can disable your user, and have a fake user enabled, this way the real user isn’t even displayed in the list of users.
    – Ramhound
    Dec 5 at 3:06















up vote
0
down vote

favorite












My MS Outlook contains emails that can be accessed even when offline, much less automatically updates my email when connected to any Internet.



Please recommend a method more efficient than deleting Outlook before I cross a border, and reinstalling Outlook afterwards, every time that I travel?










share|improve this question






















  • You do the same thing you should do to prevent anyone from looking at your stuff. Encrypt the hard drive and use a strong password.
    – Appleoddity
    Dec 5 at 1:40










  • US and other customs offices have the right to impound devices and/or demand passwords.
    – DrMoishe Pippik
    Dec 5 at 2:56










  • You can disable your user, and have a fake user enabled, this way the real user isn’t even displayed in the list of users.
    – Ramhound
    Dec 5 at 3:06













up vote
0
down vote

favorite









up vote
0
down vote

favorite











My MS Outlook contains emails that can be accessed even when offline, much less automatically updates my email when connected to any Internet.



Please recommend a method more efficient than deleting Outlook before I cross a border, and reinstalling Outlook afterwards, every time that I travel?










share|improve this question













My MS Outlook contains emails that can be accessed even when offline, much less automatically updates my email when connected to any Internet.



Please recommend a method more efficient than deleting Outlook before I cross a border, and reinstalling Outlook afterwards, every time that I travel?







microsoft-outlook






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asked Dec 5 at 0:19









Greek - Area 51 Proposal

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  • You do the same thing you should do to prevent anyone from looking at your stuff. Encrypt the hard drive and use a strong password.
    – Appleoddity
    Dec 5 at 1:40










  • US and other customs offices have the right to impound devices and/or demand passwords.
    – DrMoishe Pippik
    Dec 5 at 2:56










  • You can disable your user, and have a fake user enabled, this way the real user isn’t even displayed in the list of users.
    – Ramhound
    Dec 5 at 3:06


















  • You do the same thing you should do to prevent anyone from looking at your stuff. Encrypt the hard drive and use a strong password.
    – Appleoddity
    Dec 5 at 1:40










  • US and other customs offices have the right to impound devices and/or demand passwords.
    – DrMoishe Pippik
    Dec 5 at 2:56










  • You can disable your user, and have a fake user enabled, this way the real user isn’t even displayed in the list of users.
    – Ramhound
    Dec 5 at 3:06
















You do the same thing you should do to prevent anyone from looking at your stuff. Encrypt the hard drive and use a strong password.
– Appleoddity
Dec 5 at 1:40




You do the same thing you should do to prevent anyone from looking at your stuff. Encrypt the hard drive and use a strong password.
– Appleoddity
Dec 5 at 1:40












US and other customs offices have the right to impound devices and/or demand passwords.
– DrMoishe Pippik
Dec 5 at 2:56




US and other customs offices have the right to impound devices and/or demand passwords.
– DrMoishe Pippik
Dec 5 at 2:56












You can disable your user, and have a fake user enabled, this way the real user isn’t even displayed in the list of users.
– Ramhound
Dec 5 at 3:06




You can disable your user, and have a fake user enabled, this way the real user isn’t even displayed in the list of users.
– Ramhound
Dec 5 at 3:06










2 Answers
2






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0
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Don't use your PC for sensitive work. Keep an OS on a cheap thumb drive or HD card and destroy it before going through POE. That also helps prevent spyware being installed.



Though you can encrypt storage media, whether the HDD or external, some countries can legally demand your password and/or confiscate a device. See Wired for more information.






share|improve this answer























  • Outlook allows you to store .PST in any location you want, you could store .PST on a drive that is encrypted, and this would prevent access to those emails. Automatically updating can be solved by not storing your password.
    – Ramhound
    Dec 5 at 3:04


















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0
down vote













A password can be set for an Outlook Data File (.pst) to help prevent unintentional intrusion by other people who share your computer. When a password is used, a password prompt appears when Outlook starts or when the file is first opened within an Outlook session.



However, Outlook Data File (.pst) passwords aren't intended to provide security against intentional malicious attempts to access your information. For a better way to restrict access to your data, create a password-protected Windows user account for any person who uses the computer.



Reference: Set a password to help protect your Outlook information






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    2 Answers
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    2 Answers
    2






    active

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    up vote
    0
    down vote













    Don't use your PC for sensitive work. Keep an OS on a cheap thumb drive or HD card and destroy it before going through POE. That also helps prevent spyware being installed.



    Though you can encrypt storage media, whether the HDD or external, some countries can legally demand your password and/or confiscate a device. See Wired for more information.






    share|improve this answer























    • Outlook allows you to store .PST in any location you want, you could store .PST on a drive that is encrypted, and this would prevent access to those emails. Automatically updating can be solved by not storing your password.
      – Ramhound
      Dec 5 at 3:04















    up vote
    0
    down vote













    Don't use your PC for sensitive work. Keep an OS on a cheap thumb drive or HD card and destroy it before going through POE. That also helps prevent spyware being installed.



    Though you can encrypt storage media, whether the HDD or external, some countries can legally demand your password and/or confiscate a device. See Wired for more information.






    share|improve this answer























    • Outlook allows you to store .PST in any location you want, you could store .PST on a drive that is encrypted, and this would prevent access to those emails. Automatically updating can be solved by not storing your password.
      – Ramhound
      Dec 5 at 3:04













    up vote
    0
    down vote










    up vote
    0
    down vote









    Don't use your PC for sensitive work. Keep an OS on a cheap thumb drive or HD card and destroy it before going through POE. That also helps prevent spyware being installed.



    Though you can encrypt storage media, whether the HDD or external, some countries can legally demand your password and/or confiscate a device. See Wired for more information.






    share|improve this answer














    Don't use your PC for sensitive work. Keep an OS on a cheap thumb drive or HD card and destroy it before going through POE. That also helps prevent spyware being installed.



    Though you can encrypt storage media, whether the HDD or external, some countries can legally demand your password and/or confiscate a device. See Wired for more information.







    share|improve this answer














    share|improve this answer



    share|improve this answer








    edited Dec 5 at 3:16

























    answered Dec 5 at 2:59









    DrMoishe Pippik

    9,54721230




    9,54721230












    • Outlook allows you to store .PST in any location you want, you could store .PST on a drive that is encrypted, and this would prevent access to those emails. Automatically updating can be solved by not storing your password.
      – Ramhound
      Dec 5 at 3:04


















    • Outlook allows you to store .PST in any location you want, you could store .PST on a drive that is encrypted, and this would prevent access to those emails. Automatically updating can be solved by not storing your password.
      – Ramhound
      Dec 5 at 3:04
















    Outlook allows you to store .PST in any location you want, you could store .PST on a drive that is encrypted, and this would prevent access to those emails. Automatically updating can be solved by not storing your password.
    – Ramhound
    Dec 5 at 3:04




    Outlook allows you to store .PST in any location you want, you could store .PST on a drive that is encrypted, and this would prevent access to those emails. Automatically updating can be solved by not storing your password.
    – Ramhound
    Dec 5 at 3:04












    up vote
    0
    down vote













    A password can be set for an Outlook Data File (.pst) to help prevent unintentional intrusion by other people who share your computer. When a password is used, a password prompt appears when Outlook starts or when the file is first opened within an Outlook session.



    However, Outlook Data File (.pst) passwords aren't intended to provide security against intentional malicious attempts to access your information. For a better way to restrict access to your data, create a password-protected Windows user account for any person who uses the computer.



    Reference: Set a password to help protect your Outlook information






    share|improve this answer

























      up vote
      0
      down vote













      A password can be set for an Outlook Data File (.pst) to help prevent unintentional intrusion by other people who share your computer. When a password is used, a password prompt appears when Outlook starts or when the file is first opened within an Outlook session.



      However, Outlook Data File (.pst) passwords aren't intended to provide security against intentional malicious attempts to access your information. For a better way to restrict access to your data, create a password-protected Windows user account for any person who uses the computer.



      Reference: Set a password to help protect your Outlook information






      share|improve this answer























        up vote
        0
        down vote










        up vote
        0
        down vote









        A password can be set for an Outlook Data File (.pst) to help prevent unintentional intrusion by other people who share your computer. When a password is used, a password prompt appears when Outlook starts or when the file is first opened within an Outlook session.



        However, Outlook Data File (.pst) passwords aren't intended to provide security against intentional malicious attempts to access your information. For a better way to restrict access to your data, create a password-protected Windows user account for any person who uses the computer.



        Reference: Set a password to help protect your Outlook information






        share|improve this answer












        A password can be set for an Outlook Data File (.pst) to help prevent unintentional intrusion by other people who share your computer. When a password is used, a password prompt appears when Outlook starts or when the file is first opened within an Outlook session.



        However, Outlook Data File (.pst) passwords aren't intended to provide security against intentional malicious attempts to access your information. For a better way to restrict access to your data, create a password-protected Windows user account for any person who uses the computer.



        Reference: Set a password to help protect your Outlook information







        share|improve this answer












        share|improve this answer



        share|improve this answer










        answered Dec 5 at 8:08









        Steve Fan

        64814




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