On 9/14/2019 5:59 PM, R. Victor Klassen wrote:
Well, actually, yes.
And it makes sense. They’re trying to protect you from ransomware - software
that encrypts your stuff and then offers to give you the decryption key if you
pay up.
The idea is that a known list of applications are allowed to
> On Sep 14, 2019, at 5:11 PM, Mike or Penny Novack
> wrote:
>
> On 9/13/2019 1:50 PM, Bob Hammons wrote:
>> The trouble was Windows Defender in a recent update blocked Gnucash,
>> Quicken and Open Office data directories.
>> This was in the Ransom ware section
>> Here is a website that expl
> On Sep 14, 2019, at 5:11 PM, Mike or Penny Novack
> wrote:
>
> On 9/13/2019 1:50 PM, Bob Hammons wrote:
>> The trouble was Windows Defender in a recent update blocked Gnucash,
>> Quicken and Open Office data directories.
>> This was in the Ransom ware section
>> Here is a website that expl
On 9/13/2019 1:50 PM, Bob Hammons wrote:
The trouble was Windows Defender in a recent update blocked Gnucash, Quicken
and Open Office data directories.
This was in the Ransom ware section
Here is a website that explains how to fix this
..
Wasn't very nice of MS to do this without any no
Bob,
Thanks for reporting back not only that you solved it but documenting the steps.
I hope no one else has the same issue, but if so, there is now a reference for
them.
I’ll have to keep this in mind when I migrate some computers to Win10 for some
family members.
Regards,
Adrien
> On Sep 1
The trouble was Windows Defender in a recent update blocked Gnucash, Quicken
and Open Office data directories.
This was in the Ransom ware section
Here is a website that explains how to fix this
https://www.tenforums.com/tutorials/113430-add-remove-allowed-apps-controlled-folder-access-windows-10