Solution to prevent Tencent QQ from forcing updates and being forcibly uninstalled:
1. Rename the file **QQUpdateCenter.exe** located in **C:\Program Files\Tencent\QQ** to **QQUpdateCenter.bak**.
After doing this, whenever QQ tries to force an update, it will throw some kind of error. You can simply ignore it, click "OK," and then cancel the repair process.
2. If QQ has already been forcibly updated, uninstall QQ completely, reinstall it, and repeat the above method.
3. Delete the file **tsfsres.dat** located in **\Tencent\SafeBase**, and create a new folder named **"tsfsres.dat"** in the same directory (\Tencent\SafeBase).
Explanation: The reason for this step is that **tsfsres.dat** is the culprit behind the unauthorized plugin issue. By creating a folder named **"tsfsres.dat"**, you prevent QQ from regenerating the original file because Windows checks only the filename (not the file type) when creating new files. Since the folder with the same name exists, QQ cannot overwrite or modify it.
If this method works for you, please share it with others so more people can benefit from this solution. Many users may not understand why this works, but the key point is to block QQ's ability to regenerate the problematic file by using a folder with the same name.