Article ID: 183923 - Last Review: January 22, 2007 - Revision: 1.4 Virus warning appears when you click hyperlink to programThis article was previously published under Q183923
For a Microsoft PowerPoint 2002 and a Microsoft Powerpoint 2000 version of this article, see 291912
(http://support.microsoft.com/kb/291912/
)
.
For a Microsoft PowerPoint 97 version of this article, see 190270
(http://support.microsoft.com/kb/190270/
)
.
SYMPTOMS
When you click a hyperlink to go to an object or location outside of your PowerPoint
presentation, you may receive the following warning message:
Opening file: path to filefilename.
Some files can contain viruses or otherwise be harmful to your computer. It is important to be certain that this file is from a trustworthy source. Would you like to open this file? CAUSE
The warning message described in the "Symptoms" section of this article is
issued by Microsoft Office, not PowerPoint. This warning is referred to as the open programs warning, not the macro virus protection warning. It appears any
time you click a hyperlink to a program or run a program. You also receive
this warning when you click a hyperlink to certain types of document files. You cannot
disable this warning. Similar behavior occurs in other Microsoft Office programs
that allow you to use hyperlinks.
WORKAROUND
To work around this behavior, you can use the Run Program option rather
than the Hyperlink option in the Action Settings dialog box. This prevents the Open Programs warning from appearing in most cases.
NOTE: You can also turn off the Macro Virus Protection option in PowerPoint. MORE INFORMATION
The macro virus warning is initiated by PowerPoint when you click a hyperlink to a
file that may contain macros. When the macro virus warning is activated,
the following message appears:
The presentation you are opening contains macros. Some macros may
contain viruses that could harm your computer.
You can also disable macro virus protection by following these steps:
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