Security Office File Validation Backport for Office 2003 and 2007 User Experience

Hi, Modesto Estrada here with the Microsoft Office Sustained Engineering Security team. I wanted to shed even more light on last month's blog post regarding the future availability of the Office File Validation backport. As we move forward towards our release (CYQ1 2011), we will continue to update this blog with additional information for customers. Please watch this space for future posts on File Validation. Topics we plan to discuss in the future are deployment of … as well as troubleshooting issues.

Today’s entry is about the user experience and what you will see when Office File Validation fails and the Office Trust Center.

When we were creating the dialog boxes for failed file validation, it is a general concern that users have grown accustomed to dialog boxes, and click through them without even reading the message. In an effort to dissuade any apathy, we’ve taken a more aggressive stance by communicating the potential for malicious intent. When a user opens a Word, Excel, PowerPoint, or Publisher 97-2003 file (what happens during the open), and that file fails Office File Validation the user will be presented with the following dialog box (this is the Default Behavior).

This will allow the user the ability to either cancel or continue opening the document. In this situation we strongly recommend that the user select cancel and notify the creator or sender of the document’s potential issues.

At any time, if you feel a document you have may have been compromised please feel free to send your file to secure@microsoft.com.

NOTE: Microsoft Office 2003 and 2007 do NOT have Protected View which would allow opening of the documents in a protected sandboxed environment. Protected View only exists in Office 2010.

 

Office 2007 Trust Center

With the introduction of Office Trust Center in 2007 you can use this in conjunction with Office File Validation. By setting a trusted location in the Trust Center any files opened from this location will NOT be run through the validation process.

Select

Add your document location to the trusted path

 

For IT Pros:

As an IT Admin we all know some users can be quick to click through dialog boxes. Office File Validation will provide you with the ability to set a registry key via Group Policy which will prevent the user from even opening the file.

The following registry keys will change the file open behavior (to be documented in a TechNet article once our File Validation backport is live).

Value: InvalidFileUIOptions
Type: REG_DWORD
Default: 0
Description: When Office File Validations fails
0 = Notify user file failed. Give user the option to load the file or not
1 = Notify user file failed. No option to load the file.
2007
HKEY_CURRENT_USER\Software\Policies\Microsoft\Office\12.0\Excel\Security\FileValidation
HKEY_CURRENT_USER\Software\Policies\Microsoft\Office\12.0\Word\Security\FileValidation
HKEY_CURRENT_USER\Software\Policies\Microsoft\Office\12.0\PowerPoint\Security\FileValidation
2003
HKEY_CURRENT_USER\Software\Policies\Microsoft\Office\11.0\Excel\Security\FileValidation
HKEY_CURRENT_USER\Software\Policies\Microsoft\Office\11.0\Word\Security\FileValidation
HKEY_CURRENT_USER\Software\Policies\Microsoft\Office\11.0\PowerPoint\Security\FileValidation

If the dialog is displayed on the users’ machine Office File Validation will also log an event in the Application event log. This will give you the ability to remotely look for validation failures across your organization.

Windows XP

Windows 2008

Office 2007 Trust Center

You can set the trusted location via Group Policy.

Thanks,

Modesto and The Office File Validation Backport team