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| Sandboxie and Windows 7 Standard Accounts |
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D1G1T@L
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Unfortunatley such an action would cause the whole account to run inside Sandboxie which is very problematic for a number of reasons. Many programs that have drivers on your computer will cease to function under that mode of usage. IIRC disabling explorer.exe is akin to shutting down a core system component - ie. can't be done. Sandboxie is designed for the purpose of running protected apps alongside non protected ones, which gives a lot of flexibility and doesn't require reboots to exit/initialize protections. Its not designed however to deal with users who fight its protection and physically abuse the settings. The closest thing to what you want to accomplish is to force the browser, disable file recovery and password protect the settings. Easier still, you should have a conversation with your kids (if they are old enough) and educate them on how to use the program and why good security practices are important. |
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_________________ One Program to rule them all, One Program to confine them, One Program to wrest them all and in the sandbox bind them. |
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Thronsen
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Thanks for your reply D1G1T@L.
The kids are 5 and 7, and not malicious at all. Just naive and happy go lucky. In terms of specifics, is there a way to force Chrome or another program to run in sandboxie in one account, but not in another? I know I can manually select to not run in sandboxie every time I start up a forced program, but was looking for something a bit more automatic. Also, would there be a way to have most user initiated 'casual' requests for opening Windows Explorer (for example, click on a folder) open in Sandboxie, without causing the more drastic problems you cited of forcing the whole program there? Or if thats not possible, a way at least to prevent access to the network and my NAS. Any suggestions would be greatly appreciated. I really do like the software. Thanks, |
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Thronsen
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Bump. Is there a way to force a program to run in Sandboxie for one user, but not for another?
Thanks, |
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D1G1T@L
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Here's just the thing you're looking for: http://www.sandboxie.com/index.php?UserAccountsSettings
If you're trying to block NAS access thorugh a locally mounted network share, you could enable some form of authentication both locally and on your LAN. |
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