This policy setting controls whether administrator accounts are displayed when a user attempts to elevate a running application. By default, administrator accounts are not displayed when the user attempts to elevate a running application. If you enable this policy setting, all local administrator accounts on the PC will be displayed so the user can choose one and enter the correct password. If you disable this policy setting, users will always be required to type a user name and password to elevate.
This policy setting controls whether a device always sends a compound authentication request when the resource domain requests ...
This policy setting controls whether a device will automatically sign-in the last interactive user after Windows Update restarts ...
This policy setting controls whether a device will request claims and compound authentication for Dynamic Access Control ...
This policy setting controls whether additional data in support of error reports can be sent to Microsoft automatically. ...
This policy setting controls whether administrator accounts are displayed when a user attempts to elevate a running application. ...
This policy setting controls whether errors in general applications are included in reports when Windows Error Reporting ...
This policy setting controls whether errors in the operating system are included Windows Error Reporting is enabled. If you ...
This policy setting controls whether files read from file shares over a slow network are transparently cached in the Offline ...
This policy setting controls whether folders are redirected on a user's primary computers only. This policy setting is useful ...