Description of the Guest account in Windows XP (300489)
The information in this article applies to:
- Microsoft Windows XP Home Edition
- Microsoft Windows XP Professional
This article was previously published under Q300489 INTRODUCTIONThis article describes the Guest account in Microsoft Windows XP Home Edition and in Microsoft XP Professional.
When a computer does not join
to a domain, the Guest account serves several special functions that relate to
security and to network shares.
You can use the User
Accounts tool in Control Panel to turn off the Guest account. When you
turn off the Guest account, you remove the Guest account from the
Fast User Switching welcome screen. However, the Guest account
is not disabled.
We do not recommend that you disable the Guest account. If you disable the Guest account, you may not be able to access network resources. Additionally, you cannot access resources on a
local computer from another computer on the network.
MORE INFORMATIONUsing the Guest account on the local computer When you do not have an actual user account on the local
computer, you can use the Guest account to log on to the computer. Assume that you require temporary access to a computer and that the administrator does not want to
create a user account for you. In this scenario, you can use the Guest account to access
the computer. When your account is disabled but is not deleted, you can also use
the Guest account for temporary access. By default, the Guest
account is disabled in Windows XP Home Edition and in Windows XP Professional.
In Windows XP Professional, you can enable or disable the Guest account when
you log on as an Administrator. In Windows XP Home Edition, you must
access the Administrator account from Safe Mode. You can set rights
and permissions for the Guest account as you would for any user account. By
default, the Guest account is a member of the built-in Guests group. The Guests group
lets a user log on to a workstation or to a member server. Only a member of
the Administrators group can grant additional rights and any permissions to the Guests group. When you use the Guest account to log on, the
following activities apply:
- You do not require a password.
- You cannot install software or hardware.
- You cannot change the Guest account type.
- You cannot create a password for the
account.
- You cannot change the Guest account
picture.
- You cannot access the applications that have already been
installed on the computer.
- You cannot access the files in the Shared Documents
folder.
- You cannot access the files in the Guest
profile.
Using the Guest account to log on to a local computer from another computer on the networkIn Windows XP Home Edition, all network connections are
mapped through the Guest account. If the Guest account is not enabled or if
the Guest account does not have the appropriate share permissions, the
connection does not work correctly. If the Guest account has sufficient share
permissions, but the Guest account has not been assigned NTFS file system
permissions, you can use the Guest account to connect to the local computer. However,
in this scenario, you cannot access files or directories. By default, on computers that are running Windows XP Professional and that have not joined to a domain, all incoming
network connections are forced to use the Guest account. Additionally, on
computers that use the simple sharing security model, the Security
Properties dialog box is replaced by a simplified Shared Documents Properties
dialog box. REFERENCESFor more information about the Guest account, visit the
following Microsoft Web site:
Modification Type: | Minor | Last Reviewed: | 1/25/2006 |
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Keywords: | kbenv kbinfo KB300489 kbAudEndUser |
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