Thanks for the response Roger.
I did some more investigating and found basically what your saying.
My question is, how do I get access to it? I guess I dont necessarily need to remove it if I have access. There may be some passwords I want to manually remove. How can I access it? Is there some place I can get this info, like my adobe profile for instance?

That was the old way of removing programs, but now for apps like air and others, you need uninstallers to get all the erroneous files.
Unless you know where to look.

Best,
Karl


On Jun 9, 2011, at 1:11 AM, Roger Persson wrote:

hi, it seems like some programs use a locked keychain like "PrivateEncryptedDatak" or "microsoft intermediate certificates keychain" to store your saved passwords etc. the keychain should go away when you remove the program. I don't use a mac every day so this is just what Google told me.

By the way how do you remove a program on a mac? Do you just drag it to the wastebasket?

BR
/roger




On 2011-06-09 00:31, Karl DeSaulniers wrote:
Hello all,
Has anyone here heard of the "PrivateEncriptedDatak" keychain that Adobe
has?
Evidently Adobe installs their own keychain access on your computer and
locks you out of it!
W.. T.. H.. ???????????????

How do I remove this? What is it for? AND Why am I locked out of it, its
MY computer?

An Adobe response would be the most appropriate.

Karl DeSaulniers
Design Drumm
http://designdrumm.com

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Karl DeSaulniers
Design Drumm
http://designdrumm.com

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