| Re: yet another ieframe.dll navcancl post Don,
Thank you very much for this post. You mentioned the managing phishing GPO.
I looked into that already and it really doesn't do squat. It lets you
allow the user to manage their own phishing filter. I am suprised that there
isn't an option to globally turn off the phishing filter. I was just enroute
to finding the reg key to deploy to turn off the phishing filter when this
post came up. Thank you for saving me the time!!
"Don Varnau" wrote:
> Hi,
> Looking around in GPEDIT.MSC, it looks like you can disable phishing filter
> and disable user managing of phishing filter for either Computer
> configuration or User configuration> Administrative templates> Windows
> components> Internet Explorer.
>
> Or, you could send out the REG key as a logon script.
> HKEY_CURRENT_USER\Software\Microsoft\Internet Explorer\PhishingFilter
> DWORD "Enabled" Value of 2 is on
> Value of 1 is off
> Value of 0 is disabled (Internet Options> Advanced> Phishing filter)
> - -
> Hope this helps,
> Don
> [MS MVP- IE]
>
> "Ken C" <KenC@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in message
> news:A123F697-A8DE-4BCC-8732-B9CB78BA416B@microsoft.com...
> > Clients are XP Pro.
> > Students use folder redirection for their My Docs
> > They have no admin rights on the computer
> > Temp Internet Files have not been moved.
> >
> > Get the error that everyone gets about downloading a file related to the
> > KB931768.
> >
> > SImply turning off the phishing filter fixes the problem; however, that is
> > not a good solution in our environment (too many computers). There needs
> to
> > be a way to do this on the network. Something like group policy or
> > unapproving the installation of this patch from WSUS. Currently the GPO
> > option doesnt let you turn off the phishing filter - only lets users
> manage
> > it. There is no way to uninstall it via WSUS since the patch doesn't
> support
> > auto uninstall.
> >
> > Any ideas?
>
> |