Unfortunately, it's trivially simple to get around this so-called
protection. If the document has legal or commercial significance -- the
usual reason for wanting to protect documents from alteration -- the answer
is that Word can't protect it. Word's protection serves only to prevent
_unintentional_ changes, not to prevent a determined adversary from hacking
the content.
A good rule to remember is that if someone can see your document, they can
produce an altered version, even one that can't be proved to be "not the
original". The only question is how much work they have to do to achieve it.
--
Regards,
Jay Freedman
Microsoft Word MVP FAQ:
http://word.mvps.org
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Cooz wrote:
> Hi Lisa,
>
> Choose Tools | Protect document...
> Check option 2 in the task pane that appears and choose either the
> 1st, 3rd or 4th option in the dropdown list (read only, track changes
> or forms - since I use a Dutch version of Word I don't have the exact
> English terms available). When you click the button in option 3, you
> can provide a password.
>
> This should do the trick.
>
> Success,
> Cooz
>
>> Can you create a secure word document that can be emailed to another
>> party that they either can NOT alter, or can alter but any revisions
>> will show. "Track changes" is not sufficient, since it can be turned
>> off. I would normally PDF such a document, but it is not an option
>> in this case.