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Microsoft 2000

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Guest_imported

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Jan 1, 1970
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You are the administrator of a Windows 2000 domain. A
computer named Filesrv is used to store files. To
enhance security over the network, you assign the
permission to the corresponding folders that contain
important files. You assign NTFS-read permission to
Group1, NTFS-Write permission to Group2, Share
Permission-Full Controll to Group1 & Group2. User1 is
the member of both groups. When he attempt to browsing
the folders, what is the effective permission user1
has? And what is the effective permission when user1
attempt to log on Filesrv locally?

You are the network administrator. Currently, your
compnay's network has no domain controller and all
computers are connected to the LAN. One computer
named comp1, it has a user account named user1. User1
logged on to comp1 locally, when he attempts to browse
the shared resources under another computer named
comp2 through browsing My Network Places, the user got
prompt to provide his user name and password. User1
entered his username and password, but he still get
prompt. What is the problem and how you would solve it?

 
When combining share and NTFS level permissions, the most restrictive permission applies.

When using a peer-to-peer environment, you must always have the same username/password combination on both computers that you want to communicate. A+, MCP, MCP+I, MCSE Windows NT 4.0, MCSE Windows 2000 Early Achiever with Security Emphasis
 
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