Tomasz Posted December 29, 2007 Share Posted December 29, 2007 How to change HKCU value if remonte user not have administrator rights. I wont change his HKCU value. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Emiel Wieldraaijer Posted December 29, 2007 Share Posted December 29, 2007 Hi Thomasz, Could you try to ask the question again, because i don't understand it ? HKCU = HKey_Current_User and the logged-on user does not need administrator rights to write into his own registry. Best regards, Emiel Best regards,Emiel Wieldraaijer Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
GoogleDude Posted December 29, 2007 Share Posted December 29, 2007 (edited) HKCU = HKey_Current_User and the logged-on user does not need administrator rights to write into his own registry.I dont believe this to be true. Im pretty sure that either Group Policy's or Strict local/domain users can be locked down to where a user can not modify certain reg entries. I know you can set permissions on Reg Entries from inside RegEdit.exe asumming you have permissions!GoogleDude Edited December 29, 2007 by GoogleDude Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Tomasz Posted December 29, 2007 Author Share Posted December 29, 2007 I need modify IE proxy. I atache script to user profile in Active Directory. Script runed with "user rigts" only not working propely. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
herewasplato Posted December 29, 2007 Share Posted December 29, 2007 http://www.autoitscript.com/forum/index.ph...st&p=442902RunAsSetRun...AutoIt3ExecuteLine [size="1"][font="Arial"].[u].[/u][/font][/size] Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Tomasz Posted December 29, 2007 Author Share Posted December 29, 2007 runasset is ok, but after use this i have my HKCU, not user HKCU Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
herewasplato Posted December 29, 2007 Share Posted December 29, 2007 runasset is ok, but after use this i have my HKCU, not user HKCUDoh - I had not thought about that.You might have to elevate the user's rights, write to the reg and then put the user back. [size="1"][font="Arial"].[u].[/u][/font][/size] Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Emiel Wieldraaijer Posted December 29, 2007 Share Posted December 29, 2007 @GoogleDudeOffcourse the registry access can be blocked by group policy .. but the user still has rights on it's own registry otherwise the user cannot apply any registry settings (MRU Cache, program settings etc etc... ) Grouppolicy blockes regedit to access the registry @ThomaszYou are talking about active directory.. so you have a domain controller ... the best way to get results is to apply this settings through grouppolicyhttp://www.stbernard.com/ip4kb/iPrism/Netw...sers/IP0346.htmhttp://searchwinit.techtarget.com/tip/0,28...1230939,00.htmlhttp://www.experts-exchange.com/Operating_...Q_21725470.htmlBest regards,Emiel Best regards,Emiel Wieldraaijer Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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