A. Men. Brutha.

I don't understand the fear here.*nix has been able to do this as far as I
can remember. I guess MS just chose a different way to do things, but I'm
with Ben.

-- 
Mike Gill


-----Original Message-----
From: Ben Scott [mailto:[email protected]] 
Sent: Wednesday, September 08, 2010 1:23 PM
To: NT System Admin Issues
Subject: Re: Mac and Windows mix

On Wed, Sep 8, 2010 at 6:26 AM, Andrew S. Baker <[email protected]> wrote:
>>> Or, without editing the plist you can walk up to any Macs with 
>>> password protected screensaver on, enter the admin pswd & boom 
>>> there's the user's desktop at your disposal.
>>
>>  I wish Windows had that option.
>
> Windows 7 has the best of both worlds, IMO.

  The reason I want that is that in some offices people lock the session
with something important open and then forget and leave, then someone else
who is trusted wants to unlock it but cannot (without blowing away their
logon session).  This is often *the* reason why small offices don't want
auto-screen-locking (or have to resort to writing down passwords).

   Even non-repudiation is not an excuse; I would fully expect this to show
up in the logs, just just any number of other potentially compromising
events show up now.

  I'm not saying it should be enabled by default, but the option would be
useful in many small office environments.  You or Ken don't have to use it.

-- Ben

~ Finally, powerful endpoint security that ISN'T a resource hog! ~ ~
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