On 9/17/06 1:37 PM, "Bryan Harris" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

> Sure, but I don't want it turned off.  Then other nefarious scripts could
> access my address book...

Have you ever heard of one, let alone seen one? That warning is there (so
far) just for paranoids who know that such things have happened on Windows
PCs. There are only three ways that a "nefarious" - or any other - script -
can be run:

1) Via a compiled script that you yourself have put into your Entourage
script folder and run by selecting it in the script menu. (I.e. even if a
nefarious application downloads and and moves it to your script folder it
won't run unless you personally choose to run it.)

2) Via a compiled script that you yourself have set up to be run by a
Schedule or Rule. (Note: there is no way, not even by AppleScript
application, to set up a schedule or rule to run a particular script. No way
at all. You have to have done this yourself.)

3) Via a script application. But a script application - even if disguised as
something else - can only be run if _you_ double-click it.

No. 3 is the only one that conceivably could be a danger. But, on the Mac -
unlike Windows - there are no self-executing applications. Whether appearing
by download from the net or as an attachment in an email, it CANNOT run
unless YOU double-click it. So the only danger is if you choose to
double-click an unknown, unexpected application file. Don't do that, and you
will not have a problem. If you want to be REALLY safe, OK, turn on that
warning pref if and only if you are afraid that some file you have received
may not be what it appears to be.


Have you ever heard of such a script, ever?


-- 
Paul Berkowitz


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