I’m talking about on your own machine. Obviously it’s different if you’re using a work-controlled machine that you don’t control.
Defender, on your own machine that you control, never completely stops you from installing things. Seems you just don’t know how to ignore the defender warnings lol.
Valmond@lemmy.world 6 days ago
Wow shows you don’t know anything about computers 😂
FreedomAdvocate@lemmy.net.au 5 days ago
I’m talking about on your own machine. Obviously it’s different if you’re using a work-controlled machine that you don’t control.
Defender, on your own machine that you control, never completely stops you from installing things. Seems you just don’t know how to ignore the defender warnings lol.
Valmond@lemmy.world 5 days ago
Yeah try to weasel out of that one “I was talking about your own pc not a corporate pc which the discussion was about”.
So angry.
FreedomAdvocate@lemmy.net.au 5 days ago
Corporate pc defender rules are set by the corporation - of course the end user can’t bypass their rules.
Microsoft don’t set those rules, each individual company does.