Windows 7: Shielding multi-user login

  

There are many ways to solve this problem. This article is one of them. The following is the specific operation steps under Win7 system (in fact, Vista system can also operate like this)

1. Click the Win7 Start Menu button in the lower left corner, enter "Local Security Policy" (or secpol.msc) in the search box, press Enter or click to open "Local Security Policy". Before that, I believe everyone has read the article "I am the first secret of Windows 7 master", you must make good use of the search box of the start menu (Figure 1).


2, expand "Local Policy", click "User Rights Assignment", and find "Allow Local Login" in the right window (see Figure 2 below)


3, double-click "Allow local login", in the pop-up dialog box (this article takes the Guest account as an example), select Guest, and then click the "Delete" button in the lower right part (as shown in Figure 3 below). Of course, you can also disable Users, but you want to make sure your current user is in the Administrator user group.


After the modification is completed, click the "OK" button to save the settings of this item. Go back to Figure 2 above, find and double-click "Deny Local Login" in the right window, then delete the "Guest" account and save the settings to exit (Figure 4 and Figure 5).


View the original image (larger image)


This will be done!

In fact, the setting priority in Figure 5 is not as high as the setting in Figure 3. This means that if you set up a user in Figure 3 to log in, but in Figure 5 it is incorrectly set to refuse to log in, the system will take the settings in Figure 3 as the standard.

With the above settings, you can solve the problem of "being" installed software to a certain extent. However, at the same time, modifying this setting may affect the normal operation of some program clients, and individual software may also have problems such as program compatibility errors.

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