That is totally awesome. Thank you. Amazing that the computer is set to protect those kinds of files. It fit my situation to a T.

On 1/21/2017 7:31 PM, Mike B. wrote:
Here you go:
From: Judy
Hi, I'm posting this as it explains in a bit more detail about more boxes to
uncheck to make it permanent. This worked for me for all my documents. Judy

1.    Press Alt-F to open the File button

2.    Press T to open Options

3.    Down Arrow to Trust Center

4.    Press Alt-T to activate the Trust Center Settings button

5.    Down Arrow to Protected View

6.    Tab to the Enable Protected View for files originating from the
Internet check box

7.    Press Space to uncheck the box

8.    Tab to the Enable Protected View for files located in potentially
unsafe locations check box

9.    Press Space to uncheck the box

10.    Tab to the Enable Protected View for Outlook attachments check box

11.    Press Space to uncheck the box

12.    Tab to the OK button

13.    Press Enter and the Trust Center dialog will close

14.    Tab to the OK button

15.    Press Enter and the Word Options dialog will close
Judy

Take care.
Mike
Sent from my iBarstool.
----- Original Message -----
From: Gail the U. S. Male
To: [email protected]
Sent: Saturday, January 21, 2017 5:24 PM
Subject: Re: [JAWS-Users] A Word Mystery


I think that's an office thing. It thinks, for want of a better word, that
the file may be unsafe, so, it's being opened in protected mode on your
computer.  I know there is a way to disable that, but don't know how to go
about it.

-----Original Message-----
From: JAWS-Users-List [mailto:[email protected]] On
Behalf Of Lynn White
Sent: Saturday, January 21, 2017 7:14 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: [JAWS-Users] A Word Mystery

I'm using Office 365 and Jaws 18.


When I get a document from this file sending service called Hightail, the
Word document is shown to be in protected view. This is happening to me on
two different machines.


The files are not protected.  I sent the file I received to the individual
who sent it to me and they opened it and it was not a protected file that
they saw.


A friend of mine uses Thunderbird, it reads just fine.  Any ideas?


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