![]() Afterward, I was not notified that I should enter the passwords. Near the end of my none too helpful chat with apple support I realized I should see what happens after a simple normal reboot. One is my work account and the other is my personal account. For both of them, I had to type in the passwords and for one of the accounts I had to open gmail on my phone. When I went to System Preferences -> Internet Accounts, I clicked one of the two accounts and it said I had to open Chrome to enter the passwords. I even contemplated the possibility that the removal of the passwords might make the system more secure, but I've decided such a policy is only kicking the can down the road. I ask because I see no good reason why I should have to enter the passwords after an upgrade. What can I do to cause the passwords to be maintainedĪcross upgrades? This is the question that must be answered. Has Apple changed some policy resulting in those passwords being I have upgraded macOS more times than I can remember since my first in 2008 and until recently it has never acted this way. This has happened for only the most recent two upgrades of this MacBook Pro. After logging back in, I see a notification titledĮnter your password for "x" in Internet Accounts. I just finished the upgrade from macOS 11.5.2 to 11.6. ![]()
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