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Stopping access to control panel in XP

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21 years 3 weeks ago #1514 by naddyboy
Hi,
I'm a sys admin in a call center for a production floor of about 150 users. The network here is configured in a workgroup model due to some company policies and so no centralized administration. I use the win 98 policy editor (poledit) to create local policies for the users and restrict their accesses to resources. Lately I discovered that users are able to reach control panel and make changes even though thats restricted in their policy, when I investigated into this I found that the control panel can be accessed by going to My Documents>My Computer>Change Settings and with this a problematic user can make reasonable changes to display, regional settings etc. can control panel access be stopped completely in XP using local policy ? or can we stop access to my documents for XP prof users ? Help ! :!:
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21 years 3 weeks ago #1515 by sahirh
Mm.. yes with XP you can restrict access to more things than you'd ever want to. You have to use the group policy editor. Click start >> run >> and type gpedit.msc

Once it opens up it can be pretty confusing, there are millions of settings that you can change. I think you'd need to go to 'User Configuration' >> Administrative Templates >> Control Panel

You can also save the policy and load it on different machines, or even manage a machine remotely.. However you should seriously think of moving to a basic domain model, its a little random to have to handle 150 users without centralised administration. Speak to your compan and tell them that this is not the way its supposed to be done !

Cheers,

Sahir Hidayatullah.
Firewall.cx Staff - Associate Editor & Security Advisor
tftfotw.blogspot.com
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21 years 3 weeks ago #1561 by naddyboy
Thanx Sahir that was help but only for the time being :P
gpedit.msc applies the policy on all the users and so each time i need access to control panel i'll need to run gpedit.msc also.

I agree that we should implement a domain but the company is not willing to pay becoz they think since everything is going smooth ... (not for me thou) ... its not required. can u figure out a good reason why the company must invest ? like some potential problem or a major disaster? :twisted:

thanx

Syed :wink:
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21 years 3 weeks ago #1571 by tfs
As Sahirh mentioned, administration of many users can get a bit labor intensive and would be easier to handle on a domain model.

A lot depends on how many servers you have and how much time you are spending administering each machine.

For example, if you add a new server and want to control access, in your environment, you would have add each user to the server. In a domain model, this would already be handled by the domain controller.

Thanks,

Tom
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21 years 2 weeks ago #1618 by naddyboy
Thanx people :D
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21 years 2 weeks ago #1620 by tfs
You're welcome.

Let us know how it goes and what you decided to do.

Good luck.

Thanks,

Tom
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