Re: Windows Security Model (Configuring GDM to limit user actions)

2004-02-10 Thread Guy Teverovsky
On Wed, 2004-02-11 at 02:17, Oron Peled wrote: > On Tuesday 10 February 2004 23:49, Guy Teverovsky wrote: > > AD in general is a bunch of bundled services. You can remove AD from > > your server and can get it up and running back again. > > Does it mean it only affect other applications? or does

Re: Windows Security Model (Configuring GDM to limit user actions)

2004-02-10 Thread Guy Teverovsky
On Tue, 2004-02-10 at 22:51, Gil Freund wrote: [snip] > > This is also the weakness of it. OGO does not modify the security of > settings of the registry keys (as I assumed first time I used it), but > overrides them with the server stored keys. This gives a reasonably > intelligent user a wind

Re: Windows Security Model (Configuring GDM to limit user actions)

2004-02-10 Thread Guy Teverovsky
In the spirit of "Know your enemy" (well, actually I admit to be more MS oriented), I will drop my couple of cents... On Tue, 2004-02-10 at 13:41, Ez-Aton wrote: > Well then, I'm just not the type. I'll elaborate. > [snip] > > This isn't against you specifically Ez, every Win* user I know thinks

Re: Windows Security Model (Configuring GDM to limit user actions)

2004-02-10 Thread Gil Freund
Ez-Aton wrote: Well then, I'm just not the type. I'll elaborate. On Tuesday 10 February 2004 10:32, Oron Peled wrote: On Tuesday 10 February 2004 05:28, Ez-Aton wrote: ... starting from Windows 2000 (i don't count WinNT as a real OS anyhow), First an unrelated observation. Through the years I use

Re: Windows Security Model (Configuring GDM to limit user actions)

2004-02-10 Thread Ez-Aton
Well then, I'm just not the type. I'll elaborate. On Tuesday 10 February 2004 10:32, Oron Peled wrote: > On Tuesday 10 February 2004 05:28, Ez-Aton wrote: > > ... starting from Windows 2000 (i don't count WinNT as a real OS anyhow), > > First an unrelated observation. Through the years I used to he

Re: Configuring GDM to limit user actions

2004-02-10 Thread Oded Arbel
On Sunday 08 February 2004 15:34, David Sapir wrote: > Hi, > > I would like to know how to configure Gnome on RH9 for a specific user: > * control the menus from the "start menu" (which item will appear in the > menues) > * control which application a user can activate (run) > * require a root pass

Re: Windows Security Model (Configuring GDM to limit user actions)

2004-02-10 Thread Oron Peled
On Tuesday 10 February 2004 05:28, Ez-Aton wrote: > ... starting from Windows 2000 (i don't count WinNT as a real OS anyhow), First an unrelated observation. Through the years I used to hear: "Windows for Worgroups isn't real OS -- Win95 is true 32bit OS" "Win9X is just a graphical shell -- Wi

Re: Configuring GDM to limit user actions

2004-02-09 Thread Ez-Aton
On the Windows side of things, starting from Windows 2000 (i don't count WinNT as a real OS anyhow), under a specific DOMAIN, you could define what actions each and every user, based on his role, group, the specific computer, or almost any other parameter, can do, and cannot do. It's called Grou

RE: Configuring GDM to limit user actions

2004-02-09 Thread Arik Baratz
-Original Message- From: David Sapir [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] > Hi Arik, > > Thanks for your answer. > How can I disable the RunAs service? Start --> Run --> Settings --> Control Panel --> Administrative tools --> Services Right-click the Run-As service, select properties, click 'Sto

RE: Configuring GDM to limit user actions

2004-02-09 Thread David Sapir
Hi Arik, Thanks for your answer. How can I disable the RunAs service? How can I modify the menues? Reminder: running Gnome on RH9. David. From: "Arik Baratz" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Subject: RE: Configuring GDM to limit user actions Date: Sun, 8 F

Re: Configuring GDM to limit user actions

2004-02-08 Thread Shlomi Loubaton
page), it allows you to renice applications on the system and even kill certain applications after a defined amount of time for certain users/groups. Regards, Shlomil Mark Veltzer wrote: > Re: Configuring GDM to limit user actions > From: Mark Veltzer <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> > To: "David

Re: Configuring GDM to limit user actions

2004-02-08 Thread Micha Feigin
On Sun, Feb 08, 2004 at 06:58:11PM +0200, Arik Baratz wrote: > > > -Original Message- > From: Mark Veltzer [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] > > > 1. The operating system does not, per se, state which applications each user > > can run. If a user has running capabilities then he can launch any

RE: Configuring GDM to limit user actions

2004-02-08 Thread Arik Baratz
-Original Message- From: Mark Veltzer [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] > 1. The operating system does not, per se, state which applications each user > can run. If a user has running capabilities then he can launch any executable > file. Even an executable file which was derived from consulti

Re: Configuring GDM to limit user actions

2004-02-08 Thread Ori Idan
My previous answer was about GDM, now I read your question again and see that you are talking about GNOME, I think there is a panel in gnome that lets you edit the menus. About which application a user can run, I don't think this is controllable from gnome, for this you will have to configure th

Re: Configuring GDM to limit user actions

2004-02-08 Thread Ori Idan
David Sapir wrote: Hi, I would like to know how to configure Gnome on RH9 for a specific user: * control the menus from the "start menu" (which item will appear in the menues) * control which application a user can activate (run) * require a root password (or a previledged user password) for cert

Re: Configuring GDM to limit user actions

2004-02-08 Thread Mark Veltzer
On Sunday 08 February 2004 15:34, you wrote: > Hi, > > I would like to know how to configure Gnome on RH9 for a specific user: > * control the menus from the "start menu" (which item will appear in the > menues) > * control which application a user can activate (run) > * require a root password (or

Configuring GDM to limit user actions

2004-02-08 Thread David Sapir
Hi, I would like to know how to configure Gnome on RH9 for a specific user: * control the menus from the "start menu" (which item will appear in the menues) * control which application a user can activate (run) * require a root password (or a previledged user password) for certain applications