Reference Guide
Manage Policies
184
Recovery Questions for Windows
Authentication
At least 3 selectable questions
Specify the questions that will be presented
to Windows users during recovery questions
s
etup. Separate each question by a carriage
return. These questions will be used if the
Windows password is forgotten. At least 3
questions must be specified.
What is your mother's maiden name?
What was the name of the first school you
attended?
What is the
name of your first pet?
What is your father's middle name?
What is your mother's middle name?
Who was your first employer?
Who was your first teacher?
What city were you born in?
What city was your mother born in?
What city was your father born in?
What w
as the first concert you attended?
Who is your favorite TV show character?
What was the name of your first stuffed
animal?
What was the make of the first car you
owned?
Where did you spend your honeymoon?
Where did you meet your spouse?
What is your oldest
cousin's name?
What is your oldest niece's name?
What is your oldest nephew's name?
What is your youngest child's nickname?
What is your oldest child's nickname?
What was the last name of your third grade
teacher?
In what city or town did your mother and
father meet?
In what city or town was your first job?
Allow Recovery Questions Not Selected
Selected
Not Selected
Set to Selected to allow users to use
recovery questions/answers to log on to
Windows.
Log Events Level Audit
Errors
Audit
Details
Level of
detail in Windows Event Logs.
Determines whether events such as
fingerprint registration and authentication
attempts are logged in the Windows Event
Log.
Each higher level includes all previous levels.
Events are logged on the computer where
they occur. No
rmally, the Auditing level
provides sufficient detail, covering all logon,
authentication, fingerprint management, and
user management events. The Details levels
can fill the log file very quickly. Status
events provide information about the state
of sever
al important systems on the
computer. They are logged on configurable
intervals and generally used when events are