Yeah, I loved that feature till it just recently stopped.

Anyone know what might cause that.

Now when I open ADU&C or any other MMC, it just opens but admin related
stuff is grayed out.

I can shift, right click and runas, enter admin username and password
and it works as it should.

 

 

From: Kennedy, Jim [mailto:kennedy...@elyriaschools.org] 
Sent: Friday, January 15, 2010 8:47 AM
To: NT System Admin Issues
Subject: RE: Local Admin Permissions WAS: RE: Internet Policy

 

Win 7 makes that whole process much easier. It seems to know what needs
admin permissions so you just click it as normal and it pops the dialog
box for you. Very handy and painless for the MMC admin tools like ADUC
and so on.....

 

 

From: James Kerr [mailto:cluster...@gmail.com] 
Sent: Thursday, January 14, 2010 5:16 PM
To: NT System Admin Issues
Subject: Re: Local Admin Permissions WAS: RE: Internet Policy

 

Good idea, never thought of that.

        ----- Original Message ----- 

        From: James Hill <mailto:james.h...@superamart.com.au>  

        To: NT System Admin Issues
<mailto:ntsysadmin@lyris.sunbelt-software.com>  

        Sent: Thursday, January 14, 2010 5:05 PM

        Subject: Local Admin Permissions WAS: RE: Internet Policy

         

        I don't even run my desktop as an admin and I don't allow any of
the other IT staff to run as admins either.

         

        That's what run-as is for.

         

         

        From: James Kerr [mailto:cluster...@gmail.com] 
        Sent: Friday, 15 January 2010 8:02 AM
        To: NT System Admin Issues
        Subject: Re: Internet Policy

         

        +1000

         

        Even the top dog at our company is a standard user. My boss is a
standard user. Only admins are me and my minion.

         

        James

                ----- Original Message ----- 

                From: James Hill <mailto:james.h...@superamart.com.au>  

                To: NT System Admin Issues
<mailto:ntsysadmin@lyris.sunbelt-software.com>  

                Sent: Thursday, January 14, 2010 4:21 PM

                Subject: RE: Internet Policy

                 

                Sometimes that just requires making it painless for
them.  So that they don't notice they aren't admins because it isn't
causing any issues.

                 

                Sometimes it means educating management on the risks of
being admins and how it could affect their business.

                 

                If all that fails then sometimes you are stuck with
terrible management J

                 

                From: Jon Harris [mailto:jk.har...@gmail.com] 
                Sent: Friday, 15 January 2010 6:43 AM
                To: NT System Admin Issues
                Subject: Re: Internet Policy

                 

                That is good if you can get management buy in but not
always possible.

                 

                Jon

                On Thu, Jan 14, 2010 at 3:27 PM, James Hill <
james.h...@superamart.com.au> wrote:

                Agreed.  No offence intended but I'm amazed at how many
people still allow users to be more than just that, users.

                 

                I've never allowed it any company I have worked for.
There are always ways to work around any picky apps that want higher
permissions.

                 

                From: Jon Harris [mailto:jk.har...@gmail.com] 
                Sent: Friday, 15 January 2010 4:14 AM 

                
                To: NT System Admin Issues

                Subject: Re: Internet Policy 

                 

                Power Users can install software just FYI.

                 

                Jon

                On Thu, Jan 14, 2010 at 9:41 AM, John Aldrich <
jaldr...@blueridgecarpet.com> wrote:

                Sounds reasonable to me. I wish I could enforce a more
restrictive policy than we do here, but I really don't have the
resources to enforce much of anything. We have people using
FaceBook/MySpace and doing online shopping, etc. I've told people
numerous times not to download anything, period, without explicit
permission, but they tend to do so anyway, up to and including
installing apps. 

                 

                I finally had enough of people installing crap with
spyware attached and pretty much removed local admin permissions and
made most users "Power Users" so they can have enough permissions to run
stuff, but not install anything! So far that seems to be working. As I
work on desktop machines, I find coupon printer software and other
"crap" that has been installed over the years and clean it out.

                 

                Back to the topic at hand, I think that's a reasonable
policy. I would suggest outlawing social networking sites and game sites
(yahoo games) as those often seem to have spyware/adware associated with
them and even just playing online games could lead to a "drive by
install" of malware due to exploits.

                 

                  

                 

                From: James Kerr [mailto:cluster...@gmail.com] 

                Sent: Thursday, January 14, 2010 9:35 AM
                To: NT System Admin Issues
                Subject: Internet Policy

                 

                I know this has been discussed in the past but I'm in
the process of making changes to ours so I was interested in a little
input from my peers. We have always had a policy of not allowing our
desktops, email and Internet connection to be used for personal use at
all. That being said we have always turned a blind eye to occasional
personal use through the day. This has been a problem for us. Now we are
looking to change the policy to reflect that we do allow this type of
use.

                 

                We want the staff to know that's its ok but we also want
them to know what's not ok. I was looking to basically say the
following. "Some personal Internet use is allowed but must not interfere
with the performance of work duties and responsibilities. Personal
Internet use must be restricted to reasonable sites and materials such
as news or information that might be considered reasonable if read as a
text publication in an office environment." I'm also going to add that
downloading files is not allowed unless approved by IT and that this
includes email attachments from personal email as well. Any thoughts?

                 

                James

                 

                 

                 

                 

                 

                 

                 

                 

                 

                 

                 

                 

                 

                 

         

         

         

         

 

 

 

 

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