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Posted by Roger Abell [MVP] on November 17, 2005, 3:02 pm
Please log in for more thread options > Irv,
>
> Yeah, it really does make sense. Thank you so much.
>
> Ray
Well yes it does, sort of . . . I mean all policy settings are
enforced onto the user or computer whether they derive from
an Enforce GPO or not.
The Enforced term is possibly better than was No Override
>
>> Enforced was previously known as "No override" You enforce a GPO when you
>> want to ensure that GPO's further down the process order do not override
>> the
>> settings by using Block Inheritance or setting other values
>>
>> You can tell which GPO's have the enforce setting as the link will have a
>> little lock icon
>>
>> Irv
>>
>> "Ray" wrote:
>>
>>> Hi there,
>>>
>>> A simply question here, what is "enforced" of Group Policy for?
>>>
>>> Thanks
>>>
>>> Ray
>>>
>>>
>>>
>
>
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