P.C. Jailbreak

Joe Anderson

New member
How does application software get " censored?"What does Microsoft restrict? What do censors prevent? A P.C. " Jailbreak" which automatically voids warranties allows for "censored" application installations. How do you "Jailbreak" a P.C.?
 

Performa

Member
Do you have administrator access? If so, right clicking and "run as administrator" should get you through, depending on what you're trying to run.
 

Joe Anderson

New member
Do you have administrator access? If so, right clicking and "run as administrator" should get you through, depending on what you're trying to run.
Thanks Performa for your insight. I believe a Microsoft account gives your P.C. administrator access to make changes to other P.C. user settings on your network by re-writing their passwords with new ones. I wanted to know if applications content or subject matter is what Microsoft censors or whether censorship occurs due to inferior logic used by the apps.?
 

Performa

Member
Thanks Performa for your insight. I believe a Microsoft account gives your P.C. administrator access to make changes to other P.C. user settings on your network by re-writing their passwords with new ones. I wanted to know if applications content or subject matter is what Microsoft censors or whether censorship occurs due to inferior logic used by the apps.?
It would really depend on the application itself. If it's an app provided by the Microsoft or Windows "app storefront" built into Windows 10+, then Microsoft would have oversight into what content is permitted in the apps, similar to how Apple or Google police their respective app stores.

However, if the program or application is something found in the wild, either on physical media or the Internet, the most Microsoft can do is throw a pop up warning you that it might not be "secure" if it's unsigned/unverified code. They wouldn't have any further oversight of your local machine than that unless you're running a very limited account, or an unusually limited version of Windows like Windows 7 Start or Windows 10 Enterprise.
 

Joe Anderson

New member
It would really depend on the application itself. If it's an app provided by the Microsoft or Windows "app storefront" built into Windows 10+, then Microsoft would have oversight into what content is permitted in the apps, similar to how Apple or Google police their respective app stores.

However, if the program or application is something found in the wild, either on physical media or the Internet, the most Microsoft can do is throw a pop up warning you that it might not be "secure" if it's unsigned/unverified code. They wouldn't have any further oversight of your local machine than that unless you're running a very limited account, or an unusually limited version of Windows like Windows 7 Start or Windows 10 Enterprise.
Thanks Performa
 
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