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    Windows 10 showing weird Logon screen

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    • AmbarishrhA
      Ambarishrh
      last edited by

      Check this please https://4sysops.com/archives/reset-a-windows-10-password/

      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
      • samyS
        samy
        last edited by

        would it work if the windows installed is windows 10 and i use windows 8 bootable disk?

        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
        • DashrenderD
          Dashrender
          last edited by

          Most likely. The boot disk is mainly there to get you boot time access to the disk.

          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
          • J
            Jason Banned
            last edited by

            Why is it not part of the domain? And why would the user have had local admin rights to even do it?

            samyS 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
            • samyS
              samy @Jason
              last edited by

              @Jason because he' s the chairman.. 😛

              NattNattN scottalanmillerS 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
              • NattNattN
                NattNatt @samy
                last edited by

                @samy said:

                @Jason because he' s the chairman.. 😛

                That's more reason FOR him to be under the same security features as everyone else...surely he has more sensitive data/information than anyone else...

                1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 5
                • scottalanmillerS
                  scottalanmiller @samy
                  last edited by

                  @samy said:

                  @Jason because he' s the chairman.. 😛

                  I have to agree with NattNatt, that means that his laptop would be important, not trivial. All the more reason to have it be secure. The chairman falling below the most basic security level and being treated like an illiterate home user is... very bad. Not only is it bad for the chairman's own usability, it shows his own disregard and disrespect for the company itself. And it sends a message from the chairman to the rest of the company... he sees the company as a joke, so why should they take it seriously?

                  DashrenderD J 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 2
                  • NattNattN
                    NattNatt
                    last edited by

                    If you can get the HDD out and connect to another machine as a secondary drive, can you get the data that way? (not tried with Win10 install, so not sure if it locks it down...)

                    DashrenderD 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                    • DashrenderD
                      Dashrender @scottalanmiller
                      last edited by

                      @scottalanmiller said:

                      it shows his own disregard and disrespect for the company itself. And it sends a message from the chairman to the rest of the company... he sees the company as a joke, so why should they take it seriously?

                      Exactly! This is something I don't understand - but then again, clearly, neither does those CEOs who do this shit.

                      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                      • DashrenderD
                        Dashrender @NattNatt
                        last edited by

                        @NattNatt said:

                        If you can get the HDD out and connect to another machine as a secondary drive, can you get the data that way? (not tried with Win10 install, so not sure if it locks it down...)

                        As long as you don't have drive encryption enabled, you will have full access this way.

                        Of course individual files could have encryption, but I can't see why that would have been affected by this.

                        NattNattN 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                        • NattNattN
                          NattNatt @Dashrender
                          last edited by

                          @Dashrender said:

                          @NattNatt said:

                          If you can get the HDD out and connect to another machine as a secondary drive, can you get the data that way? (not tried with Win10 install, so not sure if it locks it down...)

                          As long as you don't have drive encryption enabled, you will have full access this way.

                          Of course individual files could have encryption, but I can't see why that would have been affected by this.

                          Yeah, that's what I was thinking, then, when you have the data, you can factory reset and do it right the second time around.

                          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                          • J
                            Jason Banned @scottalanmiller
                            last edited by Jason

                            @scottalanmiller said:

                            @samy said:

                            @Jason because he' s the chairman.. 😛

                            I have to agree with NattNatt, that means that his laptop would be important, not trivial. All the more reason to have it be secure. The chairman falling below the most basic security level and being treated like an illiterate home user is... very bad. Not only is it bad for the chairman's own usability, it shows his own disregard and disrespect for the company itself. And it sends a message from the chairman to the rest of the company... he sees the company as a joke, so why should they take it seriously?

                            Yep. None of our Board, Key investors, CEO, COO, CFO etc have admin rights. the CIO doesn't run in an admin account either (but has one).

                            NattNattN 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                            • NattNattN
                              NattNatt @Jason
                              last edited by

                              @Jason said:

                              @scottalanmiller said:

                              @samy said:

                              @Jason because he' s the chairman.. 😛

                              I have to agree with NattNatt, that means that his laptop would be important, not trivial. All the more reason to have it be secure. The chairman falling below the most basic security level and being treated like an illiterate home user is... very bad. Not only is it bad for the chairman's own usability, it shows his own disregard and disrespect for the company itself. And it sends a message from the chairman to the rest of the company... he sees the company as a joke, so why should they take it seriously?

                              Yep. None of our Board, Key investors, CEO, COO, CFO etc have admin rights the CIO doesn't run in an admin account either (but has one).

                              Well that's set up correctly at least... but that's like locking your house, windows, cat flap etc...but leaving the keys in the ignition of your car outside... Yes, you've secured most of it, but the biggest and easiest thing to do is unsecure...

                              J 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                              • J
                                Jason Banned @NattNatt
                                last edited by

                                @NattNatt said:

                                @Jason said:

                                @scottalanmiller said:

                                @samy said:

                                @Jason because he' s the chairman.. 😛

                                I have to agree with NattNatt, that means that his laptop would be important, not trivial. All the more reason to have it be secure. The chairman falling below the most basic security level and being treated like an illiterate home user is... very bad. Not only is it bad for the chairman's own usability, it shows his own disregard and disrespect for the company itself. And it sends a message from the chairman to the rest of the company... he sees the company as a joke, so why should they take it seriously?

                                Yep. None of our Board, Key investors, CEO, COO, CFO etc have admin rights the CIO doesn't run in an admin account either (but has one).

                                Well that's set up correctly at least... but that's like locking your house, windows, cat flap etc...but leaving the keys in the ignition of your car outside... Yes, you've secured most of it, but the biggest and easiest thing to do is unsecure...

                                How's that? The CIO is an IT postion so he will have and admin account at any company.

                                DashrenderD NattNattN 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                • DashrenderD
                                  Dashrender @Jason
                                  last edited by

                                  @Jason said:

                                  @NattNatt said:

                                  @Jason said:

                                  @scottalanmiller said:

                                  @samy said:

                                  @Jason because he' s the chairman.. 😛

                                  I have to agree with NattNatt, that means that his laptop would be important, not trivial. All the more reason to have it be secure. The chairman falling below the most basic security level and being treated like an illiterate home user is... very bad. Not only is it bad for the chairman's own usability, it shows his own disregard and disrespect for the company itself. And it sends a message from the chairman to the rest of the company... he sees the company as a joke, so why should they take it seriously?

                                  Yep. None of our Board, Key investors, CEO, COO, CFO etc have admin rights the CIO doesn't run in an admin account either (but has one).

                                  Well that's set up correctly at least... but that's like locking your house, windows, cat flap etc...but leaving the keys in the ignition of your car outside... Yes, you've secured most of it, but the biggest and easiest thing to do is unsecure...

                                  How's that? The CIO is an IT postion so he will have and admin account at any company.

                                  Exactly what I was thinking.

                                  Sure, the CEO shouldn't have an admin account, but the CIO is the head of IT. If they want it, they can and should have it.

                                  NattNattN 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                  • NattNattN
                                    NattNatt @Jason
                                    last edited by

                                    @Jason said:

                                    @NattNatt said:

                                    @Jason said:

                                    @scottalanmiller said:

                                    @samy said:

                                    @Jason because he' s the chairman.. 😛

                                    I have to agree with NattNatt, that means that his laptop would be important, not trivial. All the more reason to have it be secure. The chairman falling below the most basic security level and being treated like an illiterate home user is... very bad. Not only is it bad for the chairman's own usability, it shows his own disregard and disrespect for the company itself. And it sends a message from the chairman to the rest of the company... he sees the company as a joke, so why should they take it seriously?

                                    Yep. None of our Board, Key investors, CEO, COO, CFO etc have admin rights the CIO doesn't run in an admin account either (but has one).

                                    Well that's set up correctly at least... but that's like locking your house, windows, cat flap etc...but leaving the keys in the ignition of your car outside... Yes, you've secured most of it, but the biggest and easiest thing to do is unsecure...

                                    How's that? The CIO is an IT postion so he will have and admin account at any company.

                                    Yes, but his main ISNT an admin account..? You said he has one, but doesn't use it day-to-day, which is how it should be..? But the fact the Chairman's laptop isn't even on the domain is always going to be the point of failure...

                                    DashrenderD 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                    • NattNattN
                                      NattNatt @Dashrender
                                      last edited by

                                      @Dashrender said:

                                      @Jason said:

                                      @NattNatt said:

                                      @Jason said:

                                      @scottalanmiller said:

                                      @samy said:

                                      @Jason because he' s the chairman.. 😛

                                      I have to agree with NattNatt, that means that his laptop would be important, not trivial. All the more reason to have it be secure. The chairman falling below the most basic security level and being treated like an illiterate home user is... very bad. Not only is it bad for the chairman's own usability, it shows his own disregard and disrespect for the company itself. And it sends a message from the chairman to the rest of the company... he sees the company as a joke, so why should they take it seriously?

                                      Yep. None of our Board, Key investors, CEO, COO, CFO etc have admin rights the CIO doesn't run in an admin account either (but has one).

                                      Well that's set up correctly at least... but that's like locking your house, windows, cat flap etc...but leaving the keys in the ignition of your car outside... Yes, you've secured most of it, but the biggest and easiest thing to do is unsecure...

                                      How's that? The CIO is an IT postion so he will have and admin account at any company.

                                      Exactly what I was thinking.

                                      Sure, the CEO shouldn't have an admin account, but the CIO is the head of IT. If they want it, they can and should have it.

                                      @Jason said:

                                      the CIO doesn't run in an admin account either (but has one).

                                      ^ How I read it is he has one (as he should) but doesn't use his admin account for day-to-day stuff (which again, is the way it should be)?

                                      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                      • DashrenderD
                                        Dashrender @NattNatt
                                        last edited by

                                        @NattNatt said:

                                        @Jason said:

                                        @NattNatt said:

                                        @Jason said:

                                        @scottalanmiller said:

                                        @samy said:

                                        @Jason because he' s the chairman.. 😛

                                        I have to agree with NattNatt, that means that his laptop would be important, not trivial. All the more reason to have it be secure. The chairman falling below the most basic security level and being treated like an illiterate home user is... very bad. Not only is it bad for the chairman's own usability, it shows his own disregard and disrespect for the company itself. And it sends a message from the chairman to the rest of the company... he sees the company as a joke, so why should they take it seriously?

                                        Yep. None of our Board, Key investors, CEO, COO, CFO etc have admin rights the CIO doesn't run in an admin account either (but has one).

                                        Well that's set up correctly at least... but that's like locking your house, windows, cat flap etc...but leaving the keys in the ignition of your car outside... Yes, you've secured most of it, but the biggest and easiest thing to do is unsecure...

                                        How's that? The CIO is an IT postion so he will have and admin account at any company.

                                        Yes, but his main ISNT an admin account..? You said he has one, but doesn't use it day-to-day, which is how it should be..? But the fact the Chairman's laptop isn't even on the domain is always going to be the point of failure...

                                        That was the OP's situation, not @Jason's situation.

                                        NattNattN 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                        • NattNattN
                                          NattNatt @Dashrender
                                          last edited by

                                          @Dashrender said:

                                          @NattNatt said:

                                          @Jason said:

                                          @NattNatt said:

                                          @Jason said:

                                          @scottalanmiller said:

                                          @samy said:

                                          @Jason because he' s the chairman.. 😛

                                          I have to agree with NattNatt, that means that his laptop would be important, not trivial. All the more reason to have it be secure. The chairman falling below the most basic security level and being treated like an illiterate home user is... very bad. Not only is it bad for the chairman's own usability, it shows his own disregard and disrespect for the company itself. And it sends a message from the chairman to the rest of the company... he sees the company as a joke, so why should they take it seriously?

                                          Yep. None of our Board, Key investors, CEO, COO, CFO etc have admin rights the CIO doesn't run in an admin account either (but has one).

                                          Well that's set up correctly at least... but that's like locking your house, windows, cat flap etc...but leaving the keys in the ignition of your car outside... Yes, you've secured most of it, but the biggest and easiest thing to do is unsecure...

                                          How's that? The CIO is an IT postion so he will have and admin account at any company.

                                          Yes, but his main ISNT an admin account..? You said he has one, but doesn't use it day-to-day, which is how it should be..? But the fact the Chairman's laptop isn't even on the domain is always going to be the point of failure...

                                          That was the OP's situation, not @Jason's situation.

                                          So it was, the lack of avatar confuses me, thought they were the same person, my bad :') apologies @Jason - thought it was OP trying to say "but we did all this stuff" to try and make the initial thing seem better...

                                          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                          • DashrenderD
                                            Dashrender
                                            last edited by

                                            Sounds like we are all in agreement then.

                                            CIO and IT staff should have two accounts -

                                            normal every day account = non admin
                                            admin account for admin tasks = admin level.

                                            NattNattN 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
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