>On a Windows account, a user can change the default browser for their own account. Not if they lock down that setting via GPO and let the default behavior of remote > local. There's a lot of settings that can't be…
>That this is the intended behavior, for any remote management to take precedence over any local management, is a terrifying security hole. You've actually got it backwards. In an enterprise domain like this, allowing…
>On a Windows account, a user can change the default browser for their own account. Not if they lock down that setting via GPO and let the default behavior of remote > local. There's a lot of settings that can't be…
>That this is the intended behavior, for any remote management to take precedence over any local management, is a terrifying security hole. You've actually got it backwards. In an enterprise domain like this, allowing…