How to Make a Microsoft PowerPoint Presentation Read-only

  • You Must read the Blackvol Rules before making your first post otherwise you may get Permanent warning points or a Permanent Ban.

    Our resources on Blackvol Forum are CLEAN and SAFE. So you can use them for development and testing purposes. If you are on Windows and have an antivirus that alerts you about a possible infection : Know it's a false positive because all scripts are double-checked by our experts. We advise you to add Blackvol to trusted sites/sources or disable your antivirus momentarily while downloading a resource.

    Download NOTE : To download directly, please register on the site. After registration, you can see the download link at the top right of the page.

    "Enjoy Your Presence on Blackvol"

Kessler

Active member
Staff member
Administrator
Jul 7, 2020
869
186
43
Kuiper belt
www.blackvol.com
Microsoft PowerPoint Logo



If you want to discourage others from making edits to your PowerPoint presentation or let them know the file you sent is the final version, you can do so by making it read-only. Here’s how it’s done.


Note: While making your PowerPoint presentation read-only is a good deterrent from having others edit your content, it’s easy to unlock a read-only presentation. It’s by no means un-editable.

Open the presentation that you want to make read-only, then click the “File” tab.


File-tab-in-PowerPoint.png



Next, in the left-hand pane, select “Info.”


Info-option-in-left-hand-tab.png



You’ll now see a “Protect Presentation” section, which lets you (to an extent) protect against any editing of your presentation. Click “Protect Presentation.”


Protect-presentation-option.png



Once selected, a drop-down menu will appear with these four options:


  • Always Open Read-Only: This asks the reader to opt-in to edit the presentation. This prevents accidental edits.
  • Encrypt with Password: This password protects your presentation.
  • Add a Digital Signature: This adds an invisible digital signature to your presentation.
  • Mark as Final: This lets the reader know that this is the final version of the presentation.

Protect-presentation-drop-down-menu.png



All of these options are good for protecting the integrity of your Microsoft PowerPoint, but the two we’ll need here to make the presentation read-only are (1) Always Open Read-Only and (2) Mark as Final.


Selecting either option will prevent the reader from editing the presentation–unless they opt-in to do so.


Related :


If you chose the Always Open Read-Only option, the reader will see this message when opening the presentation:


“To prevent accidental changes, the author has set this file to open as read-only.”

Read-only-note.png



If you chose the Mark as Final option, the reader will see this message:


“An author has marked this presentation as final to discourage editing.”

Mark-as-final-note.png



In either case, your Microsoft PowerPoint presentation is now set to read-only. However, in both cases, all the reader has to do to edit the presentation is click the “Edit Anyway” button.
 

Members online

No members online now.