This policy setting allows you to define the number of days that must pass before virus definitions are considered out of date. If definitions are determined to be out of date, this state may trigger several additional actions, including falling back to an alternative update source or displaying a warning icon in the user interface. By default, this value is set to 14 days. If you enable this setting, virus definitions will be considered out of date after the number of days specified have passed without an update. If you disable or do not configure this setting, virus definitions will be considered out of date after the default number of days have passed without an update.
This policy setting allows you to define applications and processes that can access the Clipboard without prompting the user. ...
This policy setting allows you to define the number of consecutive scheduled scans that can be missed after which a catch-up ...
This policy setting allows you to define the number of days after which a catch-up definition update will be required. By ...
This policy setting allows you to define the number of days that must pass before spyware definitions are considered out ...
This policy setting allows you to define the number of days that must pass before virus definitions are considered out of ...
This policy setting allows you to define the order in which different definition update sources should be contacted. The ...
This policy setting allows you to define the user experience related to how pop-up windows appear in tabbed browsing in Internet ...
This policy setting allows you to determine how drivers signed by a Microsoft Windows Publisher certificate are ranked with ...
This policy setting allows you to determine whether members of the Administrators group can install and update the drivers ...