Re: advice on user accounts



Unless you want to allow anonymous access to network share on your computer
that have permissions for everyone I would leave the guest account disabled.
The biggest risk with using any administrator account is when using the
internet, including email, other than going to Windows Updates. Email
attachments, spyware, and websites that contain malicious content will take
advantage of your administrator account to do their deed when you are logged
on as such. Of course opening any software anytime as an administrator can
be a risk and best practice is to use a good virus program that will
automatically scan such applications before opening and/or warning you when
it detects script activity that could be malicious. So if you can do
internet activity as a regular user account you will reduce your risk of
something bad happening. Also you can use runas while logged on as a regular
user to do many specific tasks as an administrator. Search your Help for
runas and you will find how to use it.

Steve

http://www.microsoft.com/athome/security/protect/windowsxpsp2/Default.mspx
--- Protect Your PC tips


"Jeff" <jeff@xxxxxxxx> wrote in message
news:OmuXiPDzGHA.3280@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
I have a new notebook PC running XP MCE and am trying to do things
correctly
as far as user accounts but need advice. I am the only one who would use
this PC.

So far, I have (in my 'User Accounts' folder) my user account - which is
an
administrator account and the built in guest account which is listed as
being "off". I know I should not use the administrator account but have
done so till now because I needed it to set up the PC correctly. Now that
that part is largely done, I need to use a more rationally secure account
that is not a user account. Problem is that I am a perpetual fiddler who
is
constantly modifying the notebook by going to Settings, installing new
apps,
etc. - things that I suspect need administrative privileges.

What would be the best approach for me? How limited should my everyday
user
account be and how do I deal with my frequent need to use administrative
privileges?

Any advice would be greatly appreciated, including what to do with the
guest
account (leave it off or delete it).

Thanks.

Jeff





.



Relevant Pages

  • Re: Customizing User Profiles in Control Panel
    ... Yet I don't have an account for it set up in my CONTROL ... The Administrator account will not appear in the list of users ... folder, except for the one I'm using, i.e. folder "b)"? ... more than one user account, each would be able to access ...
    (microsoft.public.windowsxp.customize)
  • Re: Cannot Get Any Peer to Peer Non-Domain Networking to Work
    ... I create a common local user account foo on both computers A and B, ... The first command prompts for a user account and I supply foo, ... If the guest account is enabled ...
    (microsoft.public.windowsxp.network_web)
  • Re: Cannot access target throught network
    ... I hope you have included guest user account in your Configuration. ... The easiest way for you, I think, to check the guest account settings would be using "User Accounts" control panel applet (or browse ... Check if the guest account not disabled there. ...
    (microsoft.public.windowsxp.embedded)
  • Re: Welcome Screen Gone
    ... Once you've setup automatic logon for your user account, ... with the Administrator account. ...
    (microsoft.public.windowsxp.help_and_support)
  • Re: Personal Computer
    ... I'm going to guess that you have XP Pro and you were using the built-in Administrator account for your daily work. ... When you create a second user account with administrative privileges, Windows will hide the built-in Administrator account since it is supposed to be used for emergencies and not daily work anyway. ...
    (microsoft.public.windowsxp.general)