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burdakovd2010-11-12 15:44:56
Microsoft Office
burdakovd, 2010-11-12 15:44:56

MS Office, when clicking on the link: "This operation was interrupted due to restrictions imposed on this computer. Contact your system administrator"

In Word (Office 2010) I created a table of contents, but when I click on the links in the table of contents, I get the message "This operation was interrupted due to restrictions placed on this computer. Contact your system administrator."
The same problem is observed with http links, but they are rarely needed in documents, but without a table of contents it's hard.

Under the administrative user the same.

There are mentions of this problem on the Internet ( forums , tecnhet.ms , answers.ms , support.ms , ...) since Word 2003, but there is no explanation or solution.

Only some “magic” actions are offered, the side effect of which for some users is the disappearance of this error:

“Try to clean the registry, there is a wonderful Reg Organizer program ...”
I didn’t try it, but it’s a suspicious idea, install the left general-purpose program

“And try in the Word settings (Tools - Options - Edit tab) uncheck “CTRL + click to select a hyperlink” and try the transition operation again"
tried, did not help

"1. Launch Internet Explorer.
2.In the menu, select "Tools" => "Internet Options".
3. On the “programs” tab, click the “Reset settings”
button 4. Click OK "
I tried, it did not help

" I don’t know why, but for most it helps to install another browser so that it is the default, then demolish it "
Strange idea, but did not help.

"one. IE browser - default settings.

2. Make the default browser - any other browser.

3. Now we make IE the default browser again with default settings.
Did not help

UPD:

As a result:
When Chrome takes the default browser, Word starts to get stupid.
Installing Firefox with the "Make default browser" flag heals Word.

It would be possible to dig deeper, but at the moment I have done everything I need in the office, and in the near future it is unlikely that Word will be needed again.

So the easiest way so far would be to score on this. And in which case there is a “working recipe” =)

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8 answer(s)
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Oleg, 2010-11-12
@burdakovd

Or you can see what you have in your security policies in the following paragraphs:
gpedit.msc-> User Configuration -> Administrative Templates -> System -> Don't run Specific Windows application and Run only specific windows application and Restrict these programs from being launched from help?

F
forz, 2014-04-23
@foRz

This worked for me:
Step 3: Check if the default setting under HKEY_CLASSES_ROOT\.html is set to htmlfile
Click the Start button and select Run.
In the Open box, type regedit, and then click OK.
Locate and select the following registry subkey:
HKEY_CLASSES_ROOT\.html
Make sure Default is set to htmlfile. If it is not, right-click the (Default) option, select Edit, type htmlfile in the Value field, and then click OK.
Only when I manually changed it, and there was some left value, then everything worked.

L
l0calh0st, 2010-11-12
@l0calh0st

I would look here:
[HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Classes\htmlfile\shell\open\command]
@="\" C:\\Program Files\\Internet Explorer\\IEXPLORE.EXE\" -nohome"
Before C:\\ need to remove the gap.

V
Vera, 2019-05-17
@VKconsulting

Win10 64, tried all the methods found on the Internet. Nothing but installing Firefox helps in my case.
Setting Firefox's "make default browser" option does indeed solve the problem.
In this connection, I set out to find out, by successively changing all the registry keys that Firefox changed, which of them remove the error.
As a result, after several days of trial and error, it was found that the links begin to work after adding the following keys to the registry.
The keys work if they contain links to Firefox or Opera (I didn’t check with the rest), the path to the exe is any.
It is enough just to add these keys, even if there is no corresponding browser on the computer and the default browser is different.
I don't know how to explain it, but the result on my computer is consistently positive.
Perhaps someone will continue what they started and find an even more direct solution.

Windows Registry Editor Version 5.00

[HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\Software\Classes\.htm]
@="OperaHTML"

[HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\Software\Classes\.html]
@="OperaHTML"

[HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\Software\Classes\.shtml]
@="OperaHTML"
"Content Type"="text/html"
"PerceivedType"="text"

[HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\Software\Classes\.xht]
@="OperaHTML"

[HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\Software\Classes\.xhtml]
@="OperaHTML"

[HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Classes\OperaHTML\shell\open\command]
@="\"C:\\programs\\Opera\\opera.exe\" -osint -url \"%1\""

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burdakovd, 2010-11-12
@burdakovd

As a result:
When Chrome takes the default browser, Word starts to blunt.
Installing Firefox with the "Make default browser" flag heals Word.
bat file www.local-it-guy.com/tips/restrictions.html gives a few errors, changes something, but in the end the links in Word do not work until I reinstall Firefox.
It would be possible to dig deeper, but at the moment I have done everything I need in the office, and in the near future it is unlikely that Word will be needed again.
So for me the easiest way so far would be to score on this. And in which case there is a working “recipe” =)

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burdakovd, 2010-11-12
@burdakovd

NAC/DLP agent is not worth it. Costs kaspersky crystal. I pause protection, the result does not change.

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nechajnik, 2016-06-08
@nechajnik

I followed all the advice from users l0calh0st and foRz, but it didn't help. I tried to clean the computer after these actions with the Cleaner program and EVERYTHING (pah, pah, pah!) Worked! Links directly from the document open without problems.

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