We’ve tried working with Army’s tech support folks before. Not an easy task.




From: Carol Fee [mailto:c...@massbar.org]
Sent: Friday, March 19, 2010 1:38 PM
To: NT System Admin Issues
Subject: RE: Determining Password Complexity Requirements

How about asking the Army folks who sent you the machine ?

CFee
From: John Hornbuckle [mailto:john.hornbuc...@taylor.k12.fl.us]
Sent: Friday, March 19, 2010 11:26 AM
To: NT System Admin Issues
Subject: Determining Password Complexity Requirements

We have a machine that the Army sent our ROTC folks, and it’s giving us a hard 
time. It’s not our standard machine, and came pre-configured from the Army. We 
joined it to our domain, and it seems to be picking up group policy from the 
domain—but a couple of things still aren’t right.

The biggest issue is that something on the machine seems to be requiring 
passwords of greater complexity than our domain policy requires. What I can’t 
figure out is (A.) why that is and (B.) what those requirements are. I had my 
technician run gpedit.msc on the machine and look under Computer Configuration 
-> Windows Settings -> Security Settings -> Account Policies -> Password 
Policy. All of the settings there match our regular domain settings. And yet 
every time she tries to set a local account’s password to one that we know 
meets those requirements (because it’s one we use on multiple machines with no 
problems), Windows pops up a dialog saying it doesn’t meet the requirements. 
But if we put in a (much) longer and more complex password, the system will 
take it.

I ran through the fix from MSKB 313222, but to no avail (although that did fix 
several other settings the Army had imposed on the machine).

So, what the heck? Where is this machine getting its ideas about password 
requirements from? And how can I determine what those requirements are?



John Hornbuckle
MIS Department
Taylor County School District
www.taylor.k12.fl.us











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NOTICE: Florida has a broad public records law. Most written communications to 
or from this entity are public records that will be disclosed to the public and 
the media upon request. E-mail communications may be subject to public 
disclosure.


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