Inaktivera förarga ”denna sida har en ospecificerad potentiell säkerhet att riskera”, när genom att använda sparar på en knyta kontaktaktie
Har du rätt-någonsin klickat på en spara från en kartlagd aktie och har fått detta irritera egentligen popupmeddelande från Windows? Även mer förarga, när du försök och friktion och tappar sparar från en knyta kontaktaktie, får du en annan popup som frågar ”, du önskar till flyttningen, eller att kopiera sparar från detta zonplanerar?”, Så är vad avtalet?
Problemet
När som helst du försök och rätt-klickar på en spara, gillar en vinande sparar, dig ska får en irritera popup: ”Har denna sida en ospecificerad potentiell säkerhet att riskera. Skulle du som är lik att fortsätta?”, Den är även mer förarga orsakar, väl, I-förmiddagen som INTE använder Internet Explorer!

Problemet får värre…, om du försök och friktion/kopierar sparar ut ur mappen som du ska får felet ”dig önskar till flyttningen, eller att kopiera sparar från detta zonplanerar?”,
Mycket förargligt sannerligen!
Resonera
Du får detta fel, därför att Windows inte avkänner din lokal knyter kontakt riktigt, och anta, att det finns en säkerhet, riskera. Detta allt går till begreppet av ”säkerhet zonplanerar tillbaka” det som dig, har styrkan sett, om du har någonsin sett i internetutforskare panel för alternativ.
För att förhindra skurk- websites eller applikationer från att passera en UNC-bana som en anknyta för att köra en applikation avkänner ska Windows att en UNC-bana (lik \ \ computername \ sharename) inte är delen av din lokal knyter kontakt, och snabbt dig innan den gör något som kunde vara osäker. Denna säkerhetsmekanism förargar bestämt, men det är egentligen en nödvändig ondska.
är tillfogar manuellt kartlade den kända drevdatoren till undantaget listar, vad vi ska.
Fixa problemet
Du ska behov att öppna upp internetalternativ från internetutforskare bearbetar \ alternativmenyn, eller från kontrollbordet. Once there, select the Security tab, click on the “Local intranet” icon, and then click on the “Sites” button.

If you only map drives to a few machines, what you can do is click on the “Advanced” button, and then add each machine name with this format:
file://computername
For instance, the name of my file server is superfast, so I put in file://superfast and then clicked the Add button. (Make sure to click the Add button!)
If you have a number of machines on your network, you could alternatively uncheck the “Automatically detect intranet network”, and then check the other three boxes. This prevents you from having to enter each machine name manually, but allowing all network paths is probably not the most secure method, better to manually enter the machine name as detailed above.
Note: I was completely unable to use this method to remove the security popups when using an IP address to map drives. You’ll need to switch to using the computer name when mapping drives in order to remove the messages. Technically we could remove the security popups across the board using the Custom Level button, but that would leave your computer with a security hole, so I’m not going to explain it.
Now that we’ve added the exception, you can right-click on the file without any issues:
You can also copy files and generally interact with the network share without problems.
Note that this should also work in Windows 7.

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Great tip… this was getting really annoying. Thanks!
Thanks for the tip! These little nuggets of how-to are so helpful and save tons of time and frustration. Also, you noted that an IP address mapping doesn’t work, but I added my share by IP (instead of computer name) and it worked just fine. I’m using XP/SP3. Thanks again!
IE is such a piece of annoying crap
I’m getting this message without trying to open any files. I’m getting this pop up just from going online… it appears usually when the AIM ads are changing. Please help~!
Instead of putting multiple entries in the Local Intranet advanced section (such as file://EachComputer), could you put just one entry like this: file://192.168.1.* to allow access to all your network shares in the IP range, or does this pose a security risk?
Thanks Farm Geek! Tried removing that annoying pop-up myself but the one item I was missing was covered in your ‘Note’ at the bottom of the article – “Note: I was completely unable to use this method to remove the security popups when using an IP address to map drives. You’ll need to switch to using the computer name when mapping drives in order to remove the messages.”
Here is a slight variation on this that is not resolved by your article…
Our users cannot map drives directly to the servers as there are many replicating shares. We use DFS to create a domain-based namespace for drive mappings. So, instead of “\\SERVER\ShareName\” we are mapping to “\\DOMAIN\SHARES\LinkToShareName”, and DFS handles the rest.
On the strength of your article it seems sensible that I just add “file://DOMAIN” to the intranet zone, and the popup will magically go away… NOPE! This does not work and I still get that very irritating popup message
If I implement your article for one of the replicating shares and map directly then yes it all works perfectly, however directly mapping to the server is not an option
So I am wondering why adding the domain name does not work. As far as Internet Explorer is concerned it should just be a file path like any other, as the operations of DFS are transparent. I wonder if this has something to do with name resolution…
Any ideas?
PS. By the way, what is the other method for switching them off entirely? I could make this change via Group Policy to the Intranet zone, and with complete control over the Intranet zone and all IE settings fully locked down this would not be a security risk. Come on… Let the cat out of the bag please!!!
OK… I’ve clarified my issue, but still need solution!!
If I add “file://SERVER” to the Inranet sites via Group Policy, when I check in Internet Options it is there exactly as I typed it.
If I add “file://DOMAIN” (as per the drive mapping), Internet Explorer automagically modifies it to “file://*.DOMAIN”, making the path no longer valid – Why?
If I try to work around it, eliminate the dot, and put “file://*DOMAIN”, it simply does not add it to the zone at all!
Aarrrrrghh! How can I get “file://DOMAIN” (That is a Fully Qualified Domain Name, not NETBIOS), into the Intranet zone list? Registry Hack via Group Policy Preferences?
just got a WHS and moved my documents there and got this annoying window every time i access the folder…
thank you it worked perfectly!