Trustee-Based Access Control

Trustee-based access control was originally introduced in Windows NT 4.0, where it was commonly known as Windows NT 4.0 Access Control . Windows 2000 has extended the trustee-based access control functions to include support for Active Directory objects as well as support for alternate security providers. In Windows 2000, you can also interact with securable objects on non-Windows systems.

Trustee-Based Access Control

Trustee-based access control is an access control system in which users, groups, or other objects are granted a series of rights and privileges to various objects within the domain. There are various elements that are considered to be trustees, such as user accounts, groups, trusted domains, computers, ...

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