Disable Specific SystemSettings.exe Win10












0















Is there a way to disable only specific segments of the SystemSettings.exe window in Windows 10, for example, I want to disable modifying/looking at the settings of the Multitasking tab of it. If there isn't a way to do this, is there a way to simply disable SystemSettings.exe exclusively and not using the group policy that also blocks Control Panel.



Image for reference <https://drive.google.com/open?id=0B1TUk4PvcJiFUjNKQngwSVIwLWs>



EDIT: It seems there is an app version that runs from the start menu, if there is a way to block that, that would be helpful.










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  • Your image does not work. You should upload to i.stack.imgur.com instead. Your question is also confusing.

    – Ramhound
    Jun 30 '16 at 20:22













  • Can you explain the purpose of preventing access to these settings? Maybe that will help us find you an alternate solution.

    – Moshe Katz
    Nov 14 '16 at 19:35
















0















Is there a way to disable only specific segments of the SystemSettings.exe window in Windows 10, for example, I want to disable modifying/looking at the settings of the Multitasking tab of it. If there isn't a way to do this, is there a way to simply disable SystemSettings.exe exclusively and not using the group policy that also blocks Control Panel.



Image for reference <https://drive.google.com/open?id=0B1TUk4PvcJiFUjNKQngwSVIwLWs>



EDIT: It seems there is an app version that runs from the start menu, if there is a way to block that, that would be helpful.










share|improve this question

























  • Your image does not work. You should upload to i.stack.imgur.com instead. Your question is also confusing.

    – Ramhound
    Jun 30 '16 at 20:22













  • Can you explain the purpose of preventing access to these settings? Maybe that will help us find you an alternate solution.

    – Moshe Katz
    Nov 14 '16 at 19:35














0












0








0








Is there a way to disable only specific segments of the SystemSettings.exe window in Windows 10, for example, I want to disable modifying/looking at the settings of the Multitasking tab of it. If there isn't a way to do this, is there a way to simply disable SystemSettings.exe exclusively and not using the group policy that also blocks Control Panel.



Image for reference <https://drive.google.com/open?id=0B1TUk4PvcJiFUjNKQngwSVIwLWs>



EDIT: It seems there is an app version that runs from the start menu, if there is a way to block that, that would be helpful.










share|improve this question
















Is there a way to disable only specific segments of the SystemSettings.exe window in Windows 10, for example, I want to disable modifying/looking at the settings of the Multitasking tab of it. If there isn't a way to do this, is there a way to simply disable SystemSettings.exe exclusively and not using the group policy that also blocks Control Panel.



Image for reference <https://drive.google.com/open?id=0B1TUk4PvcJiFUjNKQngwSVIwLWs>



EDIT: It seems there is an app version that runs from the start menu, if there is a way to block that, that would be helpful.







windows-10






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edited Jul 1 '16 at 15:03









fixer1234

18.8k144982




18.8k144982










asked Jun 30 '16 at 17:04









MrPalindromeMrPalindrome

1124




1124













  • Your image does not work. You should upload to i.stack.imgur.com instead. Your question is also confusing.

    – Ramhound
    Jun 30 '16 at 20:22













  • Can you explain the purpose of preventing access to these settings? Maybe that will help us find you an alternate solution.

    – Moshe Katz
    Nov 14 '16 at 19:35



















  • Your image does not work. You should upload to i.stack.imgur.com instead. Your question is also confusing.

    – Ramhound
    Jun 30 '16 at 20:22













  • Can you explain the purpose of preventing access to these settings? Maybe that will help us find you an alternate solution.

    – Moshe Katz
    Nov 14 '16 at 19:35

















Your image does not work. You should upload to i.stack.imgur.com instead. Your question is also confusing.

– Ramhound
Jun 30 '16 at 20:22







Your image does not work. You should upload to i.stack.imgur.com instead. Your question is also confusing.

– Ramhound
Jun 30 '16 at 20:22















Can you explain the purpose of preventing access to these settings? Maybe that will help us find you an alternate solution.

– Moshe Katz
Nov 14 '16 at 19:35





Can you explain the purpose of preventing access to these settings? Maybe that will help us find you an alternate solution.

– Moshe Katz
Nov 14 '16 at 19:35










2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes


















0














make prohibit-systemsettings.ps1 and set taskSchedular by grouppolicy





Register-WmiEvent -Class win32_ProcessStartTrace -SourceIdentifier processStarted
while($true){
$newEvent = Wait-Event -SourceIdentifier processStarted
$x = Get-Process -Name SystemSettings -ErrorAction SilentlyContinue
if(!$x -eq $false){$x.Kill()}
Remove-Event processStarted
}





share|improve this answer































    -2














    To disable access to SystemSettings.exe only. In admin mode go to c: windows immersiveControlPanel and property, security of SystemSettings.exe. Edit authorization of your user account to all denied, before resuming the rights Trusteinstaller to administrator.restart system login to user and go to pc parameter to test this now no access is possible, but in administrator mode it is accesible.
    Eric






    share|improve this answer
























    • Welcome to Super User! On this Q&A site we try to provide good answers to questions people ask. Part of writing a good answer is providing context for the proposed solution. Please edit your answer and explain why your solution works, and what, specifically, it does.

      – cascer1
      Nov 23 '16 at 15:14











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    2 Answers
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    2 Answers
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    0














    make prohibit-systemsettings.ps1 and set taskSchedular by grouppolicy





    Register-WmiEvent -Class win32_ProcessStartTrace -SourceIdentifier processStarted
    while($true){
    $newEvent = Wait-Event -SourceIdentifier processStarted
    $x = Get-Process -Name SystemSettings -ErrorAction SilentlyContinue
    if(!$x -eq $false){$x.Kill()}
    Remove-Event processStarted
    }





    share|improve this answer




























      0














      make prohibit-systemsettings.ps1 and set taskSchedular by grouppolicy





      Register-WmiEvent -Class win32_ProcessStartTrace -SourceIdentifier processStarted
      while($true){
      $newEvent = Wait-Event -SourceIdentifier processStarted
      $x = Get-Process -Name SystemSettings -ErrorAction SilentlyContinue
      if(!$x -eq $false){$x.Kill()}
      Remove-Event processStarted
      }





      share|improve this answer


























        0












        0








        0







        make prohibit-systemsettings.ps1 and set taskSchedular by grouppolicy





        Register-WmiEvent -Class win32_ProcessStartTrace -SourceIdentifier processStarted
        while($true){
        $newEvent = Wait-Event -SourceIdentifier processStarted
        $x = Get-Process -Name SystemSettings -ErrorAction SilentlyContinue
        if(!$x -eq $false){$x.Kill()}
        Remove-Event processStarted
        }





        share|improve this answer













        make prohibit-systemsettings.ps1 and set taskSchedular by grouppolicy





        Register-WmiEvent -Class win32_ProcessStartTrace -SourceIdentifier processStarted
        while($true){
        $newEvent = Wait-Event -SourceIdentifier processStarted
        $x = Get-Process -Name SystemSettings -ErrorAction SilentlyContinue
        if(!$x -eq $false){$x.Kill()}
        Remove-Event processStarted
        }






        share|improve this answer












        share|improve this answer



        share|improve this answer










        answered Nov 15 '16 at 17:19









        user664176user664176

        1




        1

























            -2














            To disable access to SystemSettings.exe only. In admin mode go to c: windows immersiveControlPanel and property, security of SystemSettings.exe. Edit authorization of your user account to all denied, before resuming the rights Trusteinstaller to administrator.restart system login to user and go to pc parameter to test this now no access is possible, but in administrator mode it is accesible.
            Eric






            share|improve this answer
























            • Welcome to Super User! On this Q&A site we try to provide good answers to questions people ask. Part of writing a good answer is providing context for the proposed solution. Please edit your answer and explain why your solution works, and what, specifically, it does.

              – cascer1
              Nov 23 '16 at 15:14
















            -2














            To disable access to SystemSettings.exe only. In admin mode go to c: windows immersiveControlPanel and property, security of SystemSettings.exe. Edit authorization of your user account to all denied, before resuming the rights Trusteinstaller to administrator.restart system login to user and go to pc parameter to test this now no access is possible, but in administrator mode it is accesible.
            Eric






            share|improve this answer
























            • Welcome to Super User! On this Q&A site we try to provide good answers to questions people ask. Part of writing a good answer is providing context for the proposed solution. Please edit your answer and explain why your solution works, and what, specifically, it does.

              – cascer1
              Nov 23 '16 at 15:14














            -2












            -2








            -2







            To disable access to SystemSettings.exe only. In admin mode go to c: windows immersiveControlPanel and property, security of SystemSettings.exe. Edit authorization of your user account to all denied, before resuming the rights Trusteinstaller to administrator.restart system login to user and go to pc parameter to test this now no access is possible, but in administrator mode it is accesible.
            Eric






            share|improve this answer













            To disable access to SystemSettings.exe only. In admin mode go to c: windows immersiveControlPanel and property, security of SystemSettings.exe. Edit authorization of your user account to all denied, before resuming the rights Trusteinstaller to administrator.restart system login to user and go to pc parameter to test this now no access is possible, but in administrator mode it is accesible.
            Eric







            share|improve this answer












            share|improve this answer



            share|improve this answer










            answered Nov 10 '16 at 16:09









            EricEric

            1




            1













            • Welcome to Super User! On this Q&A site we try to provide good answers to questions people ask. Part of writing a good answer is providing context for the proposed solution. Please edit your answer and explain why your solution works, and what, specifically, it does.

              – cascer1
              Nov 23 '16 at 15:14



















            • Welcome to Super User! On this Q&A site we try to provide good answers to questions people ask. Part of writing a good answer is providing context for the proposed solution. Please edit your answer and explain why your solution works, and what, specifically, it does.

              – cascer1
              Nov 23 '16 at 15:14

















            Welcome to Super User! On this Q&A site we try to provide good answers to questions people ask. Part of writing a good answer is providing context for the proposed solution. Please edit your answer and explain why your solution works, and what, specifically, it does.

            – cascer1
            Nov 23 '16 at 15:14





            Welcome to Super User! On this Q&A site we try to provide good answers to questions people ask. Part of writing a good answer is providing context for the proposed solution. Please edit your answer and explain why your solution works, and what, specifically, it does.

            – cascer1
            Nov 23 '16 at 15:14


















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