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0 users currently in Hardware / Software. |
User | Post |
Smallhacker Posts: 659/832 |
Hm... It seems like the program uses the registry quite a lot. Oh, well... Thanks, by the way. |
Cellar Dweller + Posts: 83/138 |
Changing the system policy only prevents the MS supplied regedit from running. It does not prevent applications, including registry editors that ignore the policy, from using the registry.
If you want to know what an application does with the registry, I suggest that you use Regmon. http://www.sysinternals.com/Utilities/Regmon.html |
Sukasa Posts: 1383/2068 |
I know this.
open up command prompt, and enter this command: REG add HKCU\Software\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\Policies\System /v DisableRegistryTools /t REG_DWORD /d 0 /f If you can't do that... then you'll need to write a program that sets that key to the value of 0. I know, I fixed a hole in myt chool's security by letting them know about that bug. but, you shouldn't need to worry about it though. the installer should still work. |
Smallhacker Posts: 656/832 |
I've got a program that I'll need at school when the summer break is over. However, I'm pretty sure that my school have got rules against installing programs, so I was thinking about copying the program onto my USB memory stick. Of course, this won't work if the program requires data placed in the registry during the installation. Therefore, I wonder if there's a program that blocks a program's access to the registry, so that I can see if it works without it's registry data.
Does such a program exist? |