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April 05, 2007

When Non-Technical Users Want Full Admin Rights

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I recently broke one of my own rules and agreed to configure a notebook computer as a favor to a friend. The notebook belongs to the owner and president of a company that generates $10 million in annual revenue but has fewer than 10 people in office operations and no internal IT support.

As usual, when configuring a computer for a non-technical user, I made sure that all system protection tools were installed and active, including antivirus, antispyware, and disk clean-up software and a firewall. However, I wasn’t able to lock down the computer and create a limited-capability account because the owner wanted full administrative rights, despite not needing them.

As you've probably guessed, a few months later I received a request to solve a problem the computer was having. Initially, I heard that the problem was that the desktop background kept changing, but by the time I had the computer in hand, it was regularly experiencing the blue screen of death. Not surprisingly, after I got the virus-scanning utilities running, they removed a selection of viruses and Trojan horses from the system. When the system was up, I discovered that nothing on the computer, including the OS itself, had been updated in almost six months. The antivirus protection was outdated, and none of the OS patches issued by Microsoft had been applied. Although few of the updates required user intervention because I had configured automatic updates and installations whenever possible, the computer's owner had ignored the updates that did require a user to click in a pop-up window. Antivirus scans and applications such as Windows Defender that I had set up to run at night--at the request of the company--were never run because the computer wasn't left on overnight.

After quite a few reboots, Web site visits, and installations, I sent the notebook back to its owner along with a set of instructions about how to keep it updated. Maybe the owner will follow my directions, although I hold little hope of that happening; the last I heard, if there are any more problems the owner wants the computer wiped and everything reinstalled. I simply said that if I see that notebook again, I'll bill at my full hourly rate--the rate for customers who don't follow directions.

End of Article



Reader Comments
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mmclaugh@gmail.com April 05, 2007 (Article Rating: )


Good for you ! It always makes a difference when people get help for free !

shumbc1 April 05, 2007 (Article Rating: )


I face this problem constantly. I would suspect the instructions given to the user in this article will never be followed.

However, I would like to see everyone bombarding the Govt to put more effort into catching and prosecuting those perps that bring havoc to our computers.

I have not doubt, I could tell them how, they can in fact track down those that release virus' etc.

WAArnold April 05, 2007 (Article Rating: )


There is one thing here that seems to have been missed: why wasn't the user given instructions on all those "system protection tools" in the first place (or, at least, the question on whether they knew how to use them asked)? That, at least, may have avoided the second go at the notebook.

Equisilus April 05, 2007 (Article Rating: )


Good article...I've been in the same situation myself.

Richard_Athens@tax.state.ny.us April 06, 2007 (Article Rating: )


This situation happenes to me constantly. You have the right solution and it almost always works. Hit them in the wallet. I have the good problem of money doesn't matter to most of my clients. Stock brokers / traders just want the problem fixed. Trying to explain to them how important scans and updates are is just wasting time. I will just keep cashing in on it. Great Article!

pctechs April 16, 2007 (Article Rating: )


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