Outlook 2007 security

S

SPearson

I am using Outlook 2007 and have a 3rd party application that send email from
my workstations. When it attempts to send the mail I get a pop-up: A program
is trying to access e-mail addresses you have stored in Outlook. Do you want
to allow this?

When I was running Outlook 2003, I found an article on bypassing this by
creating a public folder (Outlook Security Settings) with a form in it that
would not prompt the specified users with this pop-up.

I am needing to know how to allow certain users how to bypass this in
Outlook 2007. I am using Exchange 2007.
 
V

VanguardLH

SPearson said:
I am using Outlook 2007 and have a 3rd party application that send email from
my workstations. When it attempts to send the mail I get a pop-up: A program
is trying to access e-mail addresses you have stored in Outlook. Do you want
to allow this?

When I was running Outlook 2003, I found an article on bypassing this by
creating a public folder (Outlook Security Settings) with a form in it that
would not prompt the specified users with this pop-up.

I am needing to know how to allow certain users how to bypass this in
Outlook 2007. I am using Exchange 2007.

http://www.mapilab.com/outlook/security/
 
S

SPearson

I have installed "Advance security for Outlook", but I can't find any
documentation on how to configure it to allow a certain program to go thru. I
never get the pop-up where I can tell it to allow or deny the program.

Any idea?
 
V

VanguardLH

SPearson said:
I have installed "Advance security for Outlook", but I can't find any
documentation on how to configure it to allow a certain program to go
thru. I never get the pop-up where I can tell it to allow or deny the
program.

I haven't used it (I installed it once to look at it but I didn't have
any programs that weren't already coded to cooperate with the security
model in Outlook so I uninstalled it). As I recall, you go into the
program's options and it appears as a tab panel where you configure it.


If your 3rd party application is an add-on then another add-on may not
be able to manage security permissions for the other add-on. They're
at the same level, but then the 3rd-party add-on shouldn't need
permission since it is running inside of Outlook already. You didn't
identify the 3rd party add-on or describe how it works with Outlook (as
an external program or as an add-on).
 

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