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Author Tue W2K Professional Question of the Day
wbafrank

2002-07-30, 2:06 am

And today's poser is ....

Q20. Alison wants to track use of her graphics workstation that uses Windows 2000 Professional as its operating system. Alison works in an office with other graphic designers, some who work late after she's gone home for the evening.

Alison suspects that someone might be logging on to the computer at night and looking at some of her confidential design proposals. Alison has local administrator level access on her Windows 2000 Professional Workstation. Her workstation has two hard disk drives - one which the operating system and programs are installed on, the other where her graphics data is stored.

Through the local Group Policy on her computer, Alison enables the auditing of object access. However, when she goes to the graphics data drive to specify which files and folders she would like to audit, Alison cannot find an option to configure auditing.

Which of the following is the most likely reason why Alison cannot properly set up auditing on her Workstation?

A. Auditing of process tracking is not enabled. In order to track system activity such as file access, you must enable process tracking.

B. The system has not been restarted. You must first restart a system before enabling auditing.

C. The graphics data drive that is to be audited is not formatted with NTFS. Drives must be formatted with NTFS to support auditing.

D. Auditing was enabled at the local level. Auditing must be enabled at the domain level to take effect.

E. Only domain administrators can enable auditing on Windows 2000 Professsional Workstations.

Good Luck .... see you tomorrow for the answer!!
enforcer

2002-07-30, 3:59 am

I will go with C
denis_baribeau

2002-07-30, 5:33 am

C

The graphics data drive that is to be audited is not formatted with NTFS. Drives must be formatted with NTFS to support auditing.

NetChild1985

2002-07-30, 5:40 am

"C"!
robertmillar

2002-07-30, 6:21 am

C
AlphaInfinity

2002-07-30, 11:15 am

I have to go with "C" also. By the way, hello all! This is my first post in the 70-210 forum.
Spid

2002-07-30, 11:20 am

Yup, "C" would be causing the issue.

Welcome to the forum AlphaInfinity.
Samba

2002-07-30, 11:29 am

Hello ! ok, I take "C"


Will try 210 in three weeks +/-


chunder

2002-07-30, 5:08 pm

t'is C
wbafrank

2002-07-31, 3:01 pm

quote:
Originally posted by wbafrank
And today's poser is ....

Q20. Alison wants to track use of her graphics workstation that uses Windows 2000 Professional as its operating system. Alison works in an office with other graphic designers, some who work late after she's gone home for the evening. Alison suspects that someone might be logging on to the computer at night and looking at some of her confidential design proposals. Alison has local administrator level access on her Windows 2000 Professional Workstation. Her workstation has two hard disk drives - one which the operating system and programs are installed on, the other where her graphics data is stored. Through the local Group Policy on her computer, Alison enables the auditing of object access. However, when she goes to the graphics data drive to specify which files and folders she would like to audit, Alison cannot find an option to configure auditing. Which of the following is the most likely reason why Alison cannot properly set up auditing on her Workstation?

A. Auditing of process tracking is not enabled. In order to track system activity such as file access, you must enable process tracking.
B. The system has not been restarted. You must first restart a system before enabling auditing.
C. The graphics data drive that is to be audited is not formatted with NTFS. Drives must be formatted with NTFS to support auditing.
D. Auditing was enabled at the local level. Auditing must be enabled at the domain level to take effect.
E. Only domain administrators can enable auditing on Windows 2000 Professsional Workstations.



And the answer is ....

Correct Answer: C

To set up permissions and auditing for files and folders, you must use drives formatted to use NTFS. If the drive is formatted with the FAT or FAT32 file systems you cannot implement auditing. A FAT or FAT32 formatted drive might also explain Alison's security problems as individual file and folder permissions cannot be implemented on a non-NTFS drive. The other reasons listed above aren't likely explanations as to why Alison can't audit files as they are either completely wrong or irrelevant.
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