Once you have that, then you should be able to go into RegEdit and remove/deny access to that key (or it's parent) for everyone but you, which should disallow the server from updating it.įor related info see here ("Circumventing Group Policy Settings"). administrative privileges from Oracle Database administrative privileges. It can delete admin accounts without passwords on Windows XP/7/8/8. The program offers detailed on-screen instructions which make the whole process easier. Based on the advanced technology and the professional experience, the program guarantee a 100 success rate. As you can see, it is pretty simple to let standard users run programs with admin rights. When you no longer need the functionality, simply delete the shortcut and you are good to go.
#Scr files without local admin rights update#
If you REALLY want to circumvent it, and you have local Admin access, then you need to capture the registry activity during a GP update to determine the registry path(s) for the GP you wish to stop (the Screen Saver Idle Time, for example). If the oraInst.loc file does not exist, then create the Oracle Inventory group. It can delete local admin users accounts without password or administrator rights. From this point forward, any non-admin user can use the shortcut to launch the target program as an administrator without entering the admin password.
Second thing: If it's being applied by group policy, then even if you manage to change it (say by directly editing the registry I believe it's HKCU\Software\Policies\Microsoft\Windows\Control Panel\Desktop\ScreenSaveTimeOut), it will be reset back to the Group Policy Object setting the next time the GP is updated (usually once an hour). Otherwise you may be asking for trouble trying to circumvent established company security policies (for better or worse). First thing: Ask your superiors to adjust that for you.