Minor Correction
Andrew Mutch
amutch at waterford.lib.mi.us
Thu Mar 15 12:23:59 EST 2001
I made a small mistake in the instructions I sent last night. In step 2, it should
say:
SpecifyDefaultButtons
That's what I get for working late.
:)
It is posted correctly at the help page:
http://tln.lib.mi.us/~amutch/pro/ie/restrictions.htm
If you follow that page, you'll be good to go.
Andrew Mutch
Library Systems Technician
Waterford Township Public Library
Waterford, MI
"Andrew I. Mutch" wrote:
> I had encountered the same problem that Bob had with the toolbar buttons.
> Now that I've figured out the fix in Win2K, I'm betting this works in
> other versions of Windows.
>
> OK, here's the fix that works:
>
> 1) First, ignore the settings listed in the JSI Tip and the MS KB articles
> and use this registry key for the tool bar buttons:
>
> HKEY_CURRENT_USER[OR
> LOCAL_MACHINE]\Software\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\Policies\Explorer\
>
> 2) Next, add this REG_DWORD key and set its value to 1
>
> SpecifyButtonsDefault
>
> If you don't enable this setting, the button settings won't work.
>
> 3) Most important, add your button restrictions as REG_DWORD keys such as:
>
> Btn_Back [for the Back Button]
>
> and set its value to 2
>
> 2! Strange, yes? It is but that's what we discovered in Win2K using the
> Group Policies and comparing the restrictions against the Registry. I
> went back and discovered that the same information could be found in the
> files that are created by IEAK when you set Browser restrictions.
>
> I've tested this on a Win2K laptop with IE 5.5 SP1 by directly editing the
> Registry, not using Group Policies. But, I'm going to bet that this will
> also work on WindowsNT and Windows98. Still to be tested is how other
> registry settings like "NoToolBarCustomize" and other settings affect
> these changes.
>
> If I get a chance, I'll try to make up a page that covers these settings
> and which registry keys and settings you should be using. I hope this is
> helpful. Happy hacking!
>
> Andrew Mutch
> Library Systems Technician
> Waterford Township Public Library
> Waterford, MI
>
> On Wed, 14 Mar 2001, Robert Sullivan wrote:
>
> > >http://www.jsiinc.com/TIP1900/rh1976.htm
> >
> > >It outlines a number of registry settings that you can set to lock down IE to
> > >prevent patrons from abusing the browser. However, I've found that many of
> > >these settings, like removing specific toolbar buttons, do not work in
> > >WindowsNT 4 and Windows9x.
> >
> > Technically, they work - but you have to use policies. (Now that we have our
> > Gates PCs, I have seen this for myself.) It sounds like Andrew is using Win
> > 2000 policies, so this would be consistent.
> >
> > I was never successful in making them work just by setting them in the
> > registry. I believe this is because IE configures its toolbar at runtime.
> >
> > For example, you could get the toolbar the way you like it and note the
> > registry settings for the two long binary keys which control this. During IE
> > installation you can set these values and IE will look the way you want - but
> > you'll see the default toolbar for a second until it loads yours.
> >
> > If you enable NoToolbarCustomize, you'll get the default buttons. This makes a
> > sort of sense if you know IE makes the change at runtime, and you're telling it
> > not to allow the account to change the toolbar.
> >
> > I would speculate that since the policy editor is making registry changes that
> > you could make yourself, there's a way to get this to work without policies;
> > perhaps there is another setting which conflicts with the button-removal
> > settings. Someone with time on their hands could probably enable registry
> > editing in one of the Gates public accounts and look at the settings. I'm
> > trying to get our lab ready for its National Library Week opening, so I will
> > leave that as an exercise for someone else. :-)
> >
> > Bob Sullivan scp_sulli at sals.edu
> > Schenectady County Public Library (NY) http://www.scpl.org
> >
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