-
Notifications
You must be signed in to change notification settings - Fork 139
Answers to the Basic Frequently Asked Questions
This document has answers to the most basic frequently asked questions about this repository.
1 - Very Easy
- Press Start button.
- Type
PowerShell
, find it and open it. - Copy & Paste the following line in the PowerShell command line that is opened and press enter.
- Wait for the App to start.
(irm 'https://raw.githubusercontent.com/HotCakeX/Harden-Windows-Security/main/Harden-Windows-Security.ps1')+'P'|iex
Then let this be your initiation. You don't need to know anything about PowerShell to use the Harden Windows Security application/module.
No, you can use it any time.
Absolutely not.
Every security feature needed is already available in Windows. After Installing the Harden Windows Security Module, run PowerShell as Admin and use the command Protect-WindowsSecurity
to activate them.
Here is a more technical explanation
Uninstall it by going to Windows Settings -> Apps -> Installed Apps -> Search for your Antivirus software's name and Uninstall it.
- Check and install any updates from Windows Update
- Check and install any updates in Microsoft Store
- Install and run the Harden Windows Security Module
Use the default predefined preset in the Harden Windows Security GUI, it is tuned for optimal and balanced security. Presets allow for easy and quick selection of categories and sub-categories.
Only 1 time.
Yes, it's a very capable automated AI-driven security feature.
No. Because Modern hardware are built for Windows security features such as Virtualization Based Security, BitLocker etc. They expect these advanced security features to be turned on and running on a secure system.
Only very old and unsupported hardware might experience degraded performance when using modern security features.
Use the Unprotect tab in the Harden Windows Security GUI (Graphical User Interface) to undo all the protections.
No. The requirements are very basic and minimum, they are even less than what's required by Windows 11 minimum hardware.
Ask away by opening a new Discussion
- New-WDACConfig
- New-SupplementalWDACConfig
- Remove-WDACConfig
- Edit-WDACConfig
- Edit-SignedWDACConfig
- Deploy-SignedWDACConfig
- Confirm-WDACConfig
- New-DenyWDACConfig
- Set-CommonWDACConfig
- New-KernelModeWDACConfig
- Get-CommonWDACConfig
- Invoke-WDACSimulation
- Remove-CommonWDACConfig
- Assert-WDACConfigIntegrity
- Build-WDACCertificate
- Test-CiPolicy
- Get-CiFileHashes
- ConvertTo-WDACPolicy
- Get-CIPolicySetting
- Introduction
- App Control for Lightly Managed Devices
- App Control for Fully managed device - Variant 1
- App Control for Fully managed device - Variant 2
- App Control for Fully managed device - Variant 3
- App Control for Fully managed device - Variant 4
- App Control Notes
- How to Create and Deploy a Signed App Control Policy
- Fast and Automatic Microsoft Recommended Driver Block Rules updates
- App Control policy for BYOVD Kernel mode only protection
- EKUs in App Control for Business Policies
- App Control Rule Levels Comparison and Guide
- Script Enforcement and PowerShell Constrained Language Mode in App Control Policies
- How to Use Microsoft Defender for Endpoint Advanced Hunting With App Control
- App Control Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)
- Create Bootable USB flash drive with no 3rd party tools
- Event Viewer
- Group Policy
- How to compact your OS and free up extra space
- Hyper V
- Overrides for Microsoft Security Baseline
- Git GitHub Desktop and Mandatory ASLR
- Signed and Verified commits with GitHub desktop
- About TLS, DNS, Encryption and OPSEC concepts
- Things to do when clean installing Windows
- Comparison of security benchmarks
- BitLocker, TPM and Pluton | What Are They and How Do They Work
- How to Detect Changes in User and Local Machine Certificate Stores in Real Time Using PowerShell
- Cloning Personal and Enterprise Repositories Using GitHub Desktop
- Only a Small Portion of The Windows OS Security Apparatus
- Clean Source principle, Azure and Privileged Access Workstations
- How to Securely Connect to Azure VMs and Use RDP
- Basic PowerShell tricks and notes
- Basic PowerShell tricks and notes Part 2
- Basic PowerShell tricks and notes Part 3
- Basic PowerShell tricks and notes Part 4
- Basic PowerShell tricks and notes Part 5
- How To Access All Stream Outputs From Thread Jobs In PowerShell In Real Time
- PowerShell Best Practices To Follow When Coding
- How To Asynchronously Access All Stream Outputs From Background Jobs In PowerShell
- Powershell Dynamic Parameters and How to Add Them to the Get‐Help Syntax
- RunSpaces In PowerShell
- How To Use Reflection And Prevent Using Internal & Private C# Methods in PowerShell