I didn’t ask this – but if your database is shared and you’re accessing it via Run Time – you could have the person who created your database app using the non-runtime version utilize the Trust Center to add trust to the location on their machine. ![]() Otherwise, only the specific folder has trust (not its subfolders). I have multiple trusted locations on my machine – so I have a “Location1” and “Location2”Īs for the “AllowSubfolders” => if you set it to 1, it means any sub-folders off of your trusted location inherit trust. ![]() My ComputerHKEY_CURRENT_USERSoftwareMicrosoftOfficeAccessSecurityTrusted Locations This should resolve the problems.īefore doing anything to your registry, back it up first! You could add the location of your database manually to the registry (using regedit) as a trusted location.
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