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Open PowerPoint, and check whether the problem still occurs. If the problem still occurs, quit PowerPoint, restore the file to its original location, and go to the next step. If the problem is resolved, drag com.microsoft.powerpoint.plist to the Trash.
Open PowerPoint, and check whether the problem still occurs. If the problem still occurs, quit PowerPoint, restore the file to its original location, and go to the next step. If the problem is resolved, drag com.microsoft.powerpoint.prefs.plist to the Trash.
Same issue here not linked to studio display but a LG ultra fine display. It happens indeed when others share their screen using the powerpoint live function while we use external display audio : very loud static that none one else can hear. Switching to the internal speakers/microphone fix it but going back to external display audio during the same call show the same symptoms. One needs to leave teams or at least close the call and join again.
Just wanted to chime in and say we are also experiencing this problem with our Mac users (Mac OS 12.6, both Intel and M1 chips) on Teams Version 1.5.00.26358. Static audio for certain mac users, and the powerpoint slides turn purple/magenta for many Windows users on the call. It just started happening about 2 weeks ago for one mac user who presents a lot on calls -- his audio gets a loud static noise, and then the Windows users see magenta slides (inverted color?) instead of white background slides. It does seem to be specific to Powerpoint Live sharing, and LG UltraFine displays. Our org is currently trying to test whether it's specific to the audio of the LG Ultrafine Displays, or video, or both.
Microsoft Office files can be password-protected in order to prevent tampering and ensure data integrity. But password-protected documents from earlier versions of Office are susceptible to having their hashes extracted with a simple program called office2john. Those extracted hashes can then be cracked using John the Ripper and Hashcat.
John will start cracking, and depending on the password complexity, will finish when a match is found. Press almost any key to view the current status. When the hash is cracked, a message will be displayed on-screen with the document's password: Since our password was pretty simple, it only took seconds to crack it.
In regards to this specific attack, using Microsoft Office 2016 or 2019 documents or newer may not be effective, since office2john is designed to work on earlier versions of Office. However, as you can see above, Office 2016 may very well spit out a 2013 document without the user even knowing, so it doesn't mean a "new" file can't be cracked. Plus, there are still plenty of older Microsoft Office documents floating around out there, and some organizations continue to use these older versions, making this attack still very feasible today.
Today, we learned that password-protected Microsoft Office files are not quite as secure as one would be led to believe. We used a tool called office2john to extract the hash of a DOCX file, and then cracked that hash using John the Ripper and Hashcat. These types of files are still commonly used today, so if you come across one that has a password on it, rest easy knowing that there is a way to crack it.
I have unchecked that option but am still not able to edit the graphic properly (change colour of icon not background) in powerpoint after paste special (EMF). Is there a patch to enable this (as per previous CS5 patch)? 2b1af7f3a8