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Task-Based Administrative Control Design

In the task-based design, administration of specific group policies is delegated to administrators that handle the associated specific tasks, such as security or applications. In this case, the GPOs are designed to contain only a single type of Group Policy setting, as described earlier in this lesson. In the example shown in Figure 10-12, security […]

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It is quite impossible to find someone who has never heard of Superman. He is the super hero that made a huge impact in the 80’s comics and since then he has been in the limelight. If your memory serves you right, he is the cool flashy person who wore a blue, yellow, and red […]

Group Policy Inheritance

In general, Group Policy is passed down from parent to child containers within a domain. Group Policy is not inherited from parent to child domains. Group Policy is inherited in the following ways: If a policy setting is configured (set to Enabled or Disabled) for a parent OU, and the same policy setting is not […]

How Group Policy Is Applieda

Because nonlocal GPOs are applied hierarchically, the user or computer’s configuration is a result of GPOs applied to its site, domain, and OU. Group Policy settings are applied in the following order: 1.Local GPO. Each computer running Windows Server 2003 has exactly one GPO stored locally. 2.Site GPOs. Any GPOs that have been linked to […]

How Inheritance Affects Access Control

There are two ways of assigning permissions to an object: assigning permissions explicitly and assigning them indirectly through inheritance. Permissions set explicitly are defined directly on an object by the object’s owner. Permissions assigned through inheritance are propagated to a child object from a parent object. Inherited permissions ease the task of managing permissions and […]