Greetings Ed--
If you just want to disable Content Advisor, this is done on the "Tools" -> "Internet Options" -> "Content" tab in Internet Explorer. If you had clicked the "Enable" button here, and entered a password, the button should now read "Disable". If you click that, you will, of course, be required to enter your password (which you say you know and that it works), and that should restore the Content Advisor's state to "Disabled".
Hope this helps.
Paul A. Shippert
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and I'm hovering like a fly
waiting for the windshield on the
freeway." Genesis
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-------------- Original message ----------------------
From: [log in to unmask]
> I'm looking for a way toremove my own -- mysterious -- botch. For no good
> reason, I swallowed a description I ran across about something that apears to be
> called Content Advisor. It offered some sort lf protection that seemed (on too
> darned little thought) to offer some sort of guidance-cum-protection.
>
> The result has been that, just about every time I try to follow some link on the
> 'Net, I get a small panel that tells me Content Advisor won't allow e to enter
> the page I'm requesting until "someone" at my machine enters the password.
>
> I did, BTW, declare a password with reminder phrase/sentence. Foolishly, it's
> very long -- 14 characters. Yup, it works, but just about every step I try
> (including Googling) requires that I enter that thing about every step I take.
>
> And I can't get rid of it. Can't even find anything under the name "Content
> Advisior." I've accepted so much garbage that I can't find anything that even
> looks like a possibility. Can anyone at PC-SOFT offer suggestions?
>
> ---ed nelson
>
>
> Ed Nelson (from Chicago's southmost suburbs)
> [log in to unmask]
>
> Do you want to signoff PCSOFT or just change to
> Digest mode - visit our web site:
> http://freepctech.com/pcsoft.shtml
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