Technical data

JSC 36381 MARCH 30, 2000
Baseline
4-2
4.4.3 Guest Account
Due to security concerns, the Windows NT Guest account is disabled.
4.5 Groups
Groups simplify network administration by assigning access rights and permissions to
a predefined group of users, rather than to a list of individual users. Two types of
groups
4.5.1 Global Groups
A global group consists of several user accounts from one domain, which are
grouped together under an account name. For example, the user accounts of
crewmembers in the OPS LAN NT domain are placed in the Crewmember global
group account. Every member of a global group deserves equal consideration when
assigned permissions for a network resource. See Table 4-1 OPS LAN GLOBAL
GROUPS for a list of current global groups in the OPS LAN NT Domain.
Groups Description
Crewmembers All crew members.
Domain Admins Designated OPS LAN NT Domain administrators.
Domain Guests All OPS LAN NT Domain guest.
Domain Users All OPS LAN NT Domain users.
Table 4-1
OPS LAN GLOBAL GROUPS
4.5.2 Local Groups
Local groups can include user accounts and global groups from one or more
domains, grouped together under one account name. A local group can be granted
rights and permissions to use certain resources, such as access to a particular folder,
or to perform certain administrative tasks, such as creating new user accounts. See
Table 4-2 OPS LAN LOCAL GROUPS for a list of current local group in the OPS
LAN NT Domain.