staging problem solving

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jborsecnik
2020-01-31 12:13:00 -08:00
parent a4f9ce0c59
commit e029378a1e
2 changed files with 4 additions and 4 deletions

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@ -198,7 +198,8 @@ By using Group Policy, you can apply your security audit policy to defined group
For example, you could configure a SACL for a folder called *Payroll Data* on Accounting Server 1. You can audit attempts by members of the Payroll Processors OU to delete objects from this folder. The **Object Access\\Audit File System** audit policy setting applies to Accounting Server 1. But, because it requires a corresponding resource SACL, only actions by members of the Payroll Processors OU on the Payroll Data folder will generate audit events.
- Advanced security audit policy settings were introduced in Windows Server 2008 R2 and Windows 7. These advanced audit policies can only be applied to those operating systems and later versions by using Group Policy.
-
> [!IMPORTANT]  
> Whether you apply advanced audit policies by using Group Policy or logon scripts, don't use both the basic audit policy settings under **Local Policies\\Audit Policy** *and* the advanced settings under **Security Settings\\Advanced Audit Policy Configuration**. Using both basic and advanced audit policy settings can cause unexpected results in audit reporting.

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@ -1,7 +1,6 @@
---
title: Interactive log-on: Prompt user to change password before expiration (Windows 10)
title: Interactive log-on prompt user to change password before expiration (Windows 10)
description: Best practices and security considerations for an interactive log-on prompt for users to change passwords before expiration.
ms.assetid: 8fe94781-40f7-4fbe-8cfd-5e116e6833e9
ms.reviewer:
ms.author: dansimp