Is the issue that you don't trust your desktop and application support
techs?  If so, you need to get some different techs.
 
If the issue is that your users are putting stuff on their local hard
drives that is sensitive, you need to re-train your users to put that
data in secure areas.
 
We generally don't care about techs (and even some users) having local
admin rights as long as they are assigned to a different account that
they aren't using as their primary login.  Our techs do not surf the web
or read e-mail when they are logged in with admin rights.  They use
RunAs or MakeMeAdmin to access their admin rights when needed.  We also
have an "admin terminal server" that you can log into with your admin
account to run tasks that need admin rights.
 
-Brian

 

________________________________

From: Malcolm Reitz [mailto:[email protected]] 
Sent: Wednesday, March 04, 2009 11:44 AM
To: NT System Admin Issues
Subject: Support techs remote access rights to user PCs



We are having an internal discussion on how to handle computer access
rights for our application support and desktop support techs. Right now,
certain techs are in an AD group which is in the local Administrators
group on some PCs. This lets them resolve end-user issues by accessing
the user PCs with Remote Desktop, Remote Registry, or simple connections
to a share. However, it also means they can get to anything on the
users' PCs and there is no auditable access tracking.

 

So, we'd like to remove this access privilege and have the techs use
other support methodologies, such as Remote Assistance, which requires
the users to be aware of what's going on. There are cases, though, where
the app support guys say they have to make batch updates to groups of
PCs (such as to point them to a new license server) and they're balking
at giving up their local admin rights. I've already thought of some ways
to handle these issues, but I'd like to hear what some of you have done.
We're running XP SP2/SP3 desktops on 2008 AD domains. The PCs are
managed with SCCM 2007 SP1.

 

Thanks,

-Malcolm


 

 


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