Tuesday, June 15, AM. Miguel, You should use Local non-system or Service account. Domain User Account If the service must interact with network services, access domain resources like file shares or if it uses linked server connections to other computers running SQL Server, you might use a minimally-privileged domain account. Many server-to-server activities can be performed only with a domain user account.
This account should be pre-created by domain administration in your environment. Local User Account If the computer is not part of a domain, a local user account without Windows administrator permissions is recommended. It has extensive privileges on the local system and acts as the computer on the network. The Local Service account is a built-in account that has the same level of access to resources and objects as members of the Users group.
This limited access helps safeguard the system if individual services or processes are compromised. I thought that Network Service is meant for that. And I was not the only one. But recently, I accidentally found out that this is not quite true.
So, you can access network shares with any account, just the authentication is different. Your email is never published nor shared. Save my name, email, and website in this browser for the next time I comment.
Skip to content. When accessing the network, it behaves the same as the Local System account. This entry was posted in Windows and tagged Built-In accounts , network access , Services. Bookmark the permalink. I am currently working through the lab for the exam I've checked gpo settings and can see nothing obvious that would grey out the properties box cheers Mike.
Thursday, January 29, PM. Friday, January 30, AM. Hi Mike, I've got the same issue while I'm trying to use the managed service accounts in our organisation. Proposed as answer by esmo Monday, November 28, AM. Monday, October 12, PM. Thanks Ozam. Monday, July 24, PM. Wednesday, June 5, AM. Wednesday, December 11, PM. In my case only this worked: CMD as Admin: sc.
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