Vulnerability Discussion
Inappropriate granting of user rights can provide system, administrative, and other high-level capabilities.
The "Deny log on as a batch job" user right defines accounts that are prevented from logging on to the system as a batch job, such as Task Scheduler.
In an Active Directory Domain, denying logons to the Enterprise Admins and Domain Admins groups on lower-trust systems helps mitigate the risk of privilege escalation from credential theft attacks, which could lead to the compromise of an entire domain.
The Guests group must be assigned to prevent unauthenticated access.
Check
This applies to member servers and standalone or nondomain-joined systems. A separate version applies to domain controllers.
Verify the effective setting in Local Group Policy Editor.
Run "gpedit.msc".
Navigate to Local Computer Policy >> Computer Configuration >> Windows Settings >> Security Settings >> Local Policies >> User Rights Assignment.
If the following accounts or groups are not defined for the "Deny log on as a batch job" user right, this is a finding:
Domain Systems Only:
- Enterprise Admins Group
- Domain Admins Group
All Systems:
- Guests Group
For server core installations, run the following command:
Secedit /Export /Areas User_Rights /cfg c:\path\filename.txt
Review the text file.
If the following SIDs are not defined for the "SeDenyBatchLogonRight" user right, this is a finding.
Domain Systems Only:
S-1-5-root domain-519 (Enterprise Admins)
S-1-5-domain-512 (Domain Admins)
All Systems:
S-1-5-32-546 (Guests)
Fix
Configure the policy value for Computer Configuration >> Windows Settings >> Security Settings >> Local Policies >> User Rights Assignment >> "Deny log on as a batch job" to include the following:
Domain Systems Only:
- Enterprise Admins Group
- Domain Admins Group
All Systems:
- Guests Group