单项选择题
You are the administrator of a workgroup supporting Windows 2000 Professional computers. You configure the Group Policy by setting the Account lockout duration to 0. What effect will this have?()
A.Users will never be locked out.
B.Users will be locked out for 69 days.
C.Users will be locked out after one failed logon attempt.
D.Users will be locked out indefinitely until the Administrator unlocks the user account.
相关考题
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单项选择题
Youareanetworkadministratorofanorganization.MariaandJohnareyournetworkassistant.Youhavegrantthentherightstomodifytheuserpropertiesinthecomputermanagement.Youwanttoauditthemodificationinuseraccounts.Whatshouldyoudo?()
A.Turn on auditing for objects in the Local Security Policy and Select 'Process Tracking'.
B.Turn on auditing for objects in the Local Security Policy and Select 'Object Access'.
C.Use Windows Explorer to turn on auditing for the specific files.
D.Have the administrator for domains log you on as an administrator and enable auditing for a specific file.
E.Turn on auditing for objects in the Local Security Policy and Select 'Account Management'.
F.Allow only one account at a time to log on to your shared folder. Check the event viewer to see who logged on. -
单项选择题
Youhaveashareonyourlocalcomputer.Thissharecontainssomesensitiveapplicationsintheformof.exefiles.Youwanttoaudittheuserswhoaretryingtoexecutetheseprograms.Whatshouldyoudo?()
A.Turn on auditing for objects in the Local Security Policy and Select 'Process Tracking'.
B.Turn on auditing for objects in the Local Security Policy and Select 'Object Access'.
C.Use Windows Explorer to turn on auditing for the specific files.
D.Have the administrator for domains log you on as an administrator and enable auditing for a specific file.
E.Turn on auditing for objects in the Local Security Policy and Select 'Account Management'.
F.Allow only one account at a time to log on to your shared folder. Check the event viewer to see who logged on. -
多项选择题
You have a share on your local computer. Someone has been intentionally damaging your files. You want to be able to know which account is doing this. What do you do? ()
A.Turn on auditing for objects in the Local Security Policy and Select 'Process Tracking'.
B.Turn on auditing for objects in the Local Security Policy and Select 'Object Access'.
C.Use Windows Explorer to turn on auditing for the specific files.
D.Have the administrator for domains log you on as an administrator and enable auditing for a specific file.
E.Turn on auditing for objects in the Local Security Policy and Select 'Account Management'.
F.Allow only one account at a time to log on to your shared folder. Check the event viewer to see who logged on.
