From 26af9520876ae5574032aa8105d6c9891a6a8788 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Jeanie Decker Date: Tue, 8 Jan 2019 12:57:02 -0800 Subject: [PATCH] no RDP for kiosk; UAC must be on --- windows/configuration/kiosk-methods.md | 4 +++- windows/configuration/kiosk-prepare.md | 6 +++++- windows/configuration/kiosk-single-app.md | 5 +++++ .../configuration/lock-down-windows-10-to-specific-apps.md | 7 ++++++- 4 files changed, 19 insertions(+), 3 deletions(-) diff --git a/windows/configuration/kiosk-methods.md b/windows/configuration/kiosk-methods.md index 8f2904b128..00c0e21b1f 100644 --- a/windows/configuration/kiosk-methods.md +++ b/windows/configuration/kiosk-methods.md @@ -7,7 +7,7 @@ ms.sitesec: library ms.pagetype: security ms.localizationpriority: medium author: jdeckerms -ms.date: 07/30/2018 +ms.date: 01/08/2019 --- # Configure kiosks and digital signs on Windows desktop editions @@ -30,6 +30,8 @@ There are several kiosk configuration methods that you can choose from, dependin ![icon that represents Windows](images/windows.png) | **Which edition of Windows 10 will the kiosk run?** All of the configuration methods work for Windows 10 Enterprise and Education; some of the methods work for Windows 10 Pro. Kiosk mode is not available on Windows 10 Home. ![icon that represents a user account](images/user.png) | **Which type of user account will be the kiosk account?** The kiosk account can be a local standard user account, a local administrator account, a domain account, or an Azure Active Directory (Azure AD) account, depending on the method that you use to configure the kiosk. If you want people to sign in and authenticate on the device, you should use a multi-app kiosk configuration. The single-app kiosk configuration doesn't require people to sign in to the device, although they can sign in to the kiosk app if you select an app that has a sign-in method. +>[!IMPORTANT] +>Kiosk mode is not supported over a remote desktop connection. Your kiosk users must sign in on the physical device that is set up as a kiosk. ## Methods for a single-app kiosk running a UWP app diff --git a/windows/configuration/kiosk-prepare.md b/windows/configuration/kiosk-prepare.md index 986da71577..bf646cbee3 100644 --- a/windows/configuration/kiosk-prepare.md +++ b/windows/configuration/kiosk-prepare.md @@ -8,7 +8,7 @@ ms.mktglfcycl: manage ms.sitesec: library author: jdeckerms ms.localizationpriority: medium -ms.date: 10/02/2018 +ms.date: 01/08/2019 --- # Prepare a device for kiosk configuration @@ -23,6 +23,10 @@ ms.date: 10/02/2018 > >Assigned access can be configured via Windows Management Instrumentation (WMI) or configuration service provider (CSP) to run its applications under a domain user or service account, rather than a local account. However, use of domain user or service accounts introduces risks that an attacker subverting the assigned access application might gain access to sensitive domain resources that have been inadvertently left accessible to any domain account. We recommend that customers proceed with caution when using domain accounts with assigned access, and consider the domain resources potentially exposed by the decision to do so. +>[!IMPORTANT] +>[User account control (UAC)](../security/identity-protection/user-account-control/user-account-control-overview.md) must be turned on to enable kiosk mode. +> +>Kiosk mode is not supported over a remote desktop connection. Your kiosk users must sign in on the physical device that is set up as a kiosk. For a more secure kiosk experience, we recommend that you make the following configuration changes to the device before you configure it as a kiosk: diff --git a/windows/configuration/kiosk-single-app.md b/windows/configuration/kiosk-single-app.md index 4af964b132..78969fb439 100644 --- a/windows/configuration/kiosk-single-app.md +++ b/windows/configuration/kiosk-single-app.md @@ -24,6 +24,11 @@ ms.date: 10/09/2018 --- | --- A single-app kiosk uses the Assigned Access feature to run a single app above the lockscreen.

When the kiosk account signs in, the app is launched automatically. The person using the kiosk cannot do anything on the device outside of the kiosk app. | ![Illustration of a single-app kiosk experience](images/kiosk-fullscreen-sm.png) +>[!IMPORTANT] +>[User account control (UAC)](../security/identity-protection/user-account-control/user-account-control-overview.md) must be turned on to enable kiosk mode. +> +>Kiosk mode is not supported over a remote desktop connection. Your kiosk users must sign in on the physical device that is set up as a kiosk. + You have several options for configuring your single-app kiosk. Method | Description diff --git a/windows/configuration/lock-down-windows-10-to-specific-apps.md b/windows/configuration/lock-down-windows-10-to-specific-apps.md index eb93365fca..fb8fca3fc2 100644 --- a/windows/configuration/lock-down-windows-10-to-specific-apps.md +++ b/windows/configuration/lock-down-windows-10-to-specific-apps.md @@ -9,7 +9,7 @@ ms.sitesec: library ms.pagetype: edu, security author: jdeckerms ms.localizationpriority: medium -ms.date: 01/04/2019 +ms.date: 01/09/2019 ms.author: jdecker ms.topic: article --- @@ -39,6 +39,11 @@ New features and improvements | In update You can configure multi-app kiosks using [Microsoft Intune](#intune) or a [provisioning package](#provision). +>[!IMPORTANT] +>[User account control (UAC)](../security/identity-protection/user-account-control/user-account-control-overview.md) must be turned on to enable kiosk mode. +> +>Kiosk mode is not supported over a remote desktop connection. Your kiosk users must sign in on the physical device that is set up as a kiosk. + ## Configure a kiosk in Microsoft Intune