Awesome thanks. Dave On Mon, Jul 14, 2008 at 3:13 PM, Darren Mar-Elia <darren@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > Well, ideally, you would do the change on the DDP instead of creating a 2 > nd one, but if you have to, then create the 2nd GPO, modify its settings > the way you want them, then link it to the domain at a higher precedence > level than the DDP. That should get you the result you want. > > > > Darren > > > > *From:* gptalk-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx [mailto:gptalk-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx] *On > Behalf Of *Dave Palombi > *Sent:* Monday, July 14, 2008 11:44 AM > *To:* gptalk@xxxxxxxxxxxxx > *Subject:* [gptalk] Re: Password policy Server 2003 > > > > It is the default domain policy. I only want to take out the password > section. > > What are the best steps? > > On Mon, Jul 14, 2008 at 2:43 PM, Darren Mar-Elia <darren@xxxxxxxxxx> > wrote: > > When you say, "Disable it for the other one" Dave, are you asking whether > you should undo the settings or disable the whole GPO? Since Account Policy > settings can't really be "turned off" I would say that, unless it's the > Default Domain Policy you are overriding, I would just unlink the old > account policy settings GPO from the domain. Maybe I'm missing something? > > > > Darren > > > > *From:* gptalk-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx [mailto:gptalk-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx] *On > Behalf Of *Dave Palombi > *Sent:* Monday, July 14, 2008 11:31 AM > *To:* gptalk@xxxxxxxxxxxxx > *Subject:* [gptalk] Password policy Server 2003 > > > > Hello, > > I am recreating a GPO for just a password policy due to the way our network > is setup. I do know that I can only have one password policy for windows > server 2003. If I recreate the portion for the password section "password > policy under security settings" and disable it for the other one, with this > work? > > Thanks, > > Dave > > >