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This scenario emerged when changing the domain group membership that bestows membership in BUILTIN\Administrators. In particular, the group membership for the administrator did not update on the workstation until the administrator signed in to the desktop as a normal user would. This is the scenario that raised this question:

Starting setup:

  • Domain group WSAdminGroup1 with member
    • admin1
  • Workstation ws1:
    • WSAdminGroup1 is a member of BUILTIN\Administrators
    • user1 is a member of BUILTIN\Users
  • when user1 encounters a UAC prompt, admin1 can authorize the elevation

Changes:

  • Add domain group WSAdminGroup2 with member
    • admin2
  • Add WSAdminGroup2 to BUILTIN\Administrators

Result:

  • when user1 encounters a UAC prompt, admin2 cannot authorize the elevation

So we have an administrator admin2 who should have membership in BUILTIN\Administrators on workstation ws1 by way of their domain group membership in WSAdminGroup2 but is unable to authorize UAC elevations prompts on ws1.

No amount of waiting, rebooting, or signing out by user1 caused admin2 to gain administrator access on the workstation. It turned out that signing in to the workstation desktop as admin2 finally caused admin2 to gain administrator access.

This suggests that administrator admin2's access token was not updated on workstation ws1 until admin2 logged in to the desktop. But I haven't yet found documentation that agrees with that conclusion.

In any case I'd like to get to the bottom of the following questions:

  1. What really happened to administrator admin2's access tokens as this scenario played out?
  2. For identities (like administrators) who do not regularly sign in to a workstation's desktop, is there any other way to trigger issuance of a new access token that would reflect more up-to-date group membership?
  3. Do any of the ways of authorizing that don't involve signing in to the desktop (like PowerShell remoting, or invoking "Run as administrator") cause the issuance of a new access token to occur?

1 Answer 1

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You could consider using the Protected Users capability of Windows (as discussed in this answer) to prevent caching of admin credentials at all. This helps mitigate lateral movement risks, too.

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