Active Directory brute force attacks

by gnaw0725 on 2008-01-14 12:34:03

Active Directory bursts in! It sounds a little rhyming, doesn't it? :) What is Active Directory? How to install Active Directory (AD)? Active Directory applications, its functions, backup, concepts, tutorials, advantages, and the relationship between Active Directory and DNS are common questions encountered by friends learning AD Active Directory domains. Yet, answers to these questions are often hard to find in Microsoft's Active Directory site articles, which can be confusing. Could it be that AD Active Directory domains are too simple?

Understanding AD Active Directory isn't difficult. The role of AD is to organize various resources within an enterprise network—such as computers, users, shared printers, servers, etc.—into an Active Directory domain. Within this domain, these resources are categorized into a directory tree. This way, users can conveniently access information in the Active Directory domain without worrying about where a colleague’s computer is or what the printer address is. How convenient! Through the AD Active Directory domain, people can also more easily exchange and share information within the domain without having to repeatedly copy files using USB drives. Since there is such a convenient access mechanism, naturally, there must also be a secure safeguard mechanism! AD Active Directory domains are precisely a security management standard based on this information-sharing foundation.

So, with the convenient sharing mechanism and secure management standards of AD Active Directory domains, what benefits and effects can they bring to our enterprises? The article you're reading originates from Active Directory SEO: http://gnaw0725.blogbus.com. There are three key points: