- Nov 6, 2008
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OK, I'm completely stumped.
We have a SBS 2003 environment. We recently performed a swing migration to upgrade our server (the hardware).
After the upgrade on Monday morning, users came into the office and users were unable to log into the domain from thier machines.
However, all of the Domain Admins were able to login fine.
A few users were able to log into the domain only because they had local admin rights to thier machines.
I gave eveyone local admin rights to thier machines and now everyone is logged in.
Obviously this is not the ideal environment.
I forsee utter chaos in our near future if we don't lock down our environment.
My questions are:
1. Why do we need local admin rights to login to the domain?
2. How can we change this so users with "user" rights can log in?
3. What could have changed during the swing migration?
Does anyone have any ideas?
			
			We have a SBS 2003 environment. We recently performed a swing migration to upgrade our server (the hardware).
After the upgrade on Monday morning, users came into the office and users were unable to log into the domain from thier machines.
However, all of the Domain Admins were able to login fine.
A few users were able to log into the domain only because they had local admin rights to thier machines.
I gave eveyone local admin rights to thier machines and now everyone is logged in.
Obviously this is not the ideal environment.
I forsee utter chaos in our near future if we don't lock down our environment.
My questions are:
1. Why do we need local admin rights to login to the domain?
2. How can we change this so users with "user" rights can log in?
3. What could have changed during the swing migration?
Does anyone have any ideas?
 
				
		 
			 
 
		 
 
		 
 
		 
 
		 
 
		 
 
		
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