With a password to open document - is possible not to ask only once per session?

Here is my scenario: user reads a "password to open" document that contains links to other web pages, etc.  The user clicks on a link, go to the new page, and then uses the back button/back key to return to the password protected document, where they must enter the password to open again and do every time they click on a link and then later attempt to return to the document.

Is there a way to bypass the retype repeated / home / re-enter the password?  (I think not, but I'll ask anyway).  The user did enter his password, most of the time just a minute or two earlier, before they clicked on the link in the document password protected.

P.S. I have a few other questions, (by-products) indirectly related to this general theme.  I'll post those in their appropriate forum, then edit this post with links to these posts.  FYI, the other positions are / will be:

  • Is there a better way to manually adjust each link in a document to use javascript and repeat process whenever the document is updated, to make the links to open in a new window (when you see a pdf in a browser window).  [Edit: here is the link: http://forums.adobe.com/message/5055202#5055202 ]
  • Is it possible to an html page or an element in a PDF document (at the discretion of the author of the document) to open a pdf file in the acrobat reader window instead of in the browser, without asking each user to change their player settings?  [Edit: I ended up asking that question in the same post listed above]

Once the instance of Acrobat or Reader that contains a PDF file protected by password has been closed, you can avoid having to retype the password. If the links do not target a window or a new tab, then the browser will unload the plugin - and apart from all of the link targets change, you cannot prevent this.

Tags: Acrobat

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