Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Computing
  3. News

Macro viruses are back, but Office 2016 has a new feature that can help

Add as a preferred source on Google

Microsoft Office macro viruses aren’t the only resurgent ’90s phenomenon right now, but they are the one that cause network administrators to lose the most sleep. Microsoft is offering a new tool for Office 2016 that might help.

Enterprise administrators can now set network-wide rules that disable macros for all documents downloaded from the Internet, allowing only locally created macros to run. Microsoft outlined the new features in a blog post on Technet, which also explores the extent of the problem.

Recommended Videos

It turns out that, in enterprise environments, macro viruses make up the bulk of Office-specific attacks: 98 percent, to be exact. Macros allow Office users to automate all kind of things inside a document, but have also been a popular vector for viruses since the days of Windows 95. Such macro viruses are on an upswing again this year.

“The enduring appeal for macro-based malware appears to rely on a victim’s likelihood to enable macros,” says the Microsoft post. “Previous versions of Office include a warning when opening documents that contain macros, but malware authors have become more resilient in their social engineering tactics, luring users to enable macros in good faith and ending up infected.”

The new feature prevents individual users from enabling macros in certain situations. Network administrators in an enterprise environment can set group policy that makes opening such malware less likely. Three kinds of documents can be filtered:

  • Documents downloaded from file-sharing sites like OneDrive and Dropbox.
  • Documents attached to emails that came from outside the organization (assuming your network uses Outlook and Exchange for email).
  • Documents opened from public shares, such as file-sharing sites.

Administrators can disable macros in all documents that come from these sources, without blocking macros in documents created locally or stored on the company server.

This policy could potentially annoy some users, but it’s likely a good security move for any company concerned about macro viruses. And while there’s no version of this feature in the home version of Office right now, we hope something similar comes along there as well.

Justin Pot
Justin's always had a passion for trying out new software, asking questions, and explaining things – tech journalism is the…
Windows 11 just fixed one of Search’s dumbest limitations, and you’ll wonder how you lived without it
One less character, one less annoyance every time you search your PC.
Person sitting and using a Windows Surface computer with Windows 11.

If you have ever typed two letters into the Windows 11 search box, paused, and watched nothing useful happen until you added more characters, you already know exactly why this Windows 11 update matters. 

Microsoft's June 2026 Patch Tuesday update, part of a release Windows Latest calls the biggest of the year (via Windows Latest), quietly fixes that. Windows Search can now find and prioritize files with as few as two characters, down from the old three-character minimum.

Read more
Brazil’s secret World Cup weapon taught the team when to ignore it
The data said he wasn't running enough. The footage said he was always in the “perfect tactical position.”
Soccer ball in net

Brazil has more World Cup titles than anyone, five of them to be precise, but after going through five straight tournaments without adding to that count, the team is leaning hard on data this time. 

Every player wears a sensor-packed "smart vest" tracking field position (via GPS), heart rate, and a stat called "player load," the same kind of numbers that your Whoop band or Apple Watch brags about, but tuned specifically for the sport.

Read more
Meta employees are revolting against its AI rules and it’s a lesson for us all
Employee frustration is spilling into public view as Meta doubles down on AI
Meta Connect 2025

Meta's aggressive push into artificial intelligence is facing growing resistance from an unexpected group: its own employees.

According to a recent report from WIRED, frustration inside Meta has reached a boiling point following a series of AI-related restructuring efforts, layoffs, and workplace policies. The tensions became public this week when an employee interrupted a company-wide livestream with an expletive-filled rant directed at Meta's AI leadership, shocking thousands of colleagues watching the presentation.

Read more