I can now open .pdf documents directly from saved files, but I still can`t open them directly from my email. If Adobe Reader is already open, it will open and display well, but if Adobe Reader is not open when you try to open the unsaved attachment, the error message will still appear. No Acrobat entry in HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINESoftware, so it`s strange to see “AppInitialized” under my user account. Under certain conditions, attempting to open a PDF document with Adobe Reader X will result in the error “Before continuing, you must first start Adobe Acrobat and accept the End User License Agreement.” Opening the file in Adobe Reader (File > Open) works correctly. I get this error when I try to install the Adobe Reader update. I have Creative Cloud and my Adobe Acrobat is licensed and active. What`s there? All the files in the folder that were blocked now open by double-clicking on them, so it doesn`t just remember the permissions of individual files. Hmmm. Explicit administrator permission was required on Win7 to run the update installer. perhaps cycling protected mode from a user level will re-enumerate accessible folders in some way? In my scenario, I initially tried to update Reader 10.0.1 to 10.1.0 with SCUP and the published update. This resulted in my custom configuration being overwritten (customizations included accepting the default license agreement, removing the auto-updater, and disabling Protected Mode).

I then had to recreate a custom installation using the customization wizard using the MSI 10.1.0 file from the Adobe FTP site. After running this, I now get the above error on computers that have never had Acrobat before. I do not seem to have that problem. I wonder if it`s just the randomness of everything, or because I have higher privileges than users. I have also encountered several times that the Adobe Reader X closes automatically without msg error. it closes at random. Adobe X = dog droppings! I had it for a month before applying it, and I had no problems. People with faster computers than mine reported slow openings and just general garbage from them! I put Foxit on some of the least technically capable users and they love it! “Disable Protected Mode on Startup” In this case, I also need to disable it. Cause Whenever my users want to open an embedded PDF file in MS Word, it is indicated that the file cannot be found. But when I turn it off, it is able to open the file without any problems. I have exactly the same problem, all the forums I`ve reviewed tell me that the End User Agreement should become a command prompt when opening Acrobat Reader, but that`s not the case because I installed about two years ago (and I probably accepted the agreement at the time).

I can`t reinstall the whole thing because I no longer have these hard drives and now I`m stuck because I can`t open PDF in my web browser. If the file name contains the words “CRM” or “SCRIPT” and you are using the latest version of Acrobat Reader (10.1.0), you will receive the error message you mentioned. We simply renamed the affected files and everything was fine. There may be more words that should not be used. It seems that strangely, this error only occurs when there is a string `CR` (well done Adobe!) somewhere in the file name or path. Another obvious workaround is to rename the file/folder to get rid of “CR”. It worked for me: helpx.adobe.com/acrobat/using/display-pdf-browser-acrobat-xi.html It seems like it`s a permissions issue because as an administrator I don`t see the error message. However, if a user opens the PDF file at the same time through Adobe Reader (as opposed to Windows Explorer), they can open it. This would therefore exclude a problem of permissions.

Some users have had problems with Adobe Reader X. When they try to open PDFs stored on a network share, they say, “Before you continue, you must first launch Adobe Acrobat and accept the End User License Agreement. With v10.1x, PDFs have a problem when YOU process DFS shares – prompt to open the PDF file in protected view, etc. To resolve this issue, let`s disable the “Protected Mode” option for drives. Now that we`ve encountered this “license” issue, the solution seems to be to re-enable the Protected Mode setting. It is not feasible!!! I received this error consistently with some (but not all) PDF files when accessed through a UNC path (DFS or otherwise) or through a mapped drive. The same thing happened when I double-clicked on the affected PDFs when they were attachments in Outlook 2010. The same file stored on a local drive (C: or USB flash drive) opened successfully. it also seems that other threads have been launched (forums.adobe.com/message/3767559#3767559), so I don`t know when this can be seen or answered. Can you tell us if this article solves the problem: helpx.adobe.com/acrobat/kb/bla. In short, it suggests the following: Solution 1: Believe it or not, I got rid of the above error message by reactivating Protected Mode, although this has its own problems.

I had previously disabled it due to issues with DFS in version 10.0. If you re-enable it, the above error will be removed and DFS paths will work on version 10.1, but drives mapped to DFS paths will still fail. UPDATE: It seems that Alex is right. I removed the bProtectedMode registry entry from HKLMSoftwarePoliciesadobe10.0featureLockdown and was able to open all the files without the message. However, I`m not 100% sure what this does to other PDF files as we originally disabled it so that some files could be opened. Previously, this user agreed with protected mode enabled, but in a recent test, I was prevented from opening a b/c web PDF of it on my PC at my desktop. We have successfully fixed the error on our computers with the following REG keys running WinXP SP3 and Windows 7 x64. Aha. It looks like it could have been. I had disabled advanced security, but as an administrator. It seems that I have to disable it logged in as a user.

Or does anyone know how to set it as disabled by default? Enabling Protected Mode is a new feature in Reader X that provides a layer of sandbox security in Reader. You can read this here: blogs.adobe.com/livecycle/2010/11/technical-details-of-adobe-reader-x-protected-mode.html I can`t view web PDFs because I have to accept the end user license agreement and I don`t know where to do it. Please tell me exactly what to do. Thanks, I reported my results to Adobe 2 weeks ago in the bug reporting feature, but I haven`t received a response. This is definitely a bug that they need to fix as soon as possible. In the Adobe forum, a user replied that he had successfully removed and reinstalled all Adobe applications and Adobe registry keys. I`m definitely not ready to reinstall Photoshop, so I`m not going to try this whole procedure. But it`s interesting to see a few Acrobat entries in my registry next to the drive entries: but it turns out that this error message is buggy.. .