| Hostname | IP Address | Status | Assigned To | Last Scan | Actions |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| SCHR-P3-DP-001 | 164.231.170.44 | 2026-03-05 | |||
Finding DetailsEvaluate-STIG 1.2601.0 (Scan-WindowsServer2022_Checks) was unable to determine a Status but found the below configuration on 03/05/2026: ResultHash: A2DFD837F05076354B18E9404AAC0860BC860EE5 ~~~~~ No enabled accounts found that are set to expire within 72 hours of the PasswordLastSet date. If there are enabled 'emergency' accounts currently on the system, this should be marked as Open. Otherwise, mark as Not Applicable. Comments |
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Check Text
Determine if emergency administrator accounts are used and identify any that exist. If none exist, this is NA. If emergency administrator accounts cannot be configured with an expiration date due to an ongoing crisis, the accounts must be disabled or removed when the crisis is resolved. If emergency administrator accounts have not been configured with an expiration date or have not been disabled or removed following the resolution of a crisis, this is a finding. Domain Controllers: Open "PowerShell". Enter "Search-ADAccount -AccountExpiring | FT Name, AccountExpirationDate". If "AccountExpirationDate" has been defined and is not within 72 hours for an emergency administrator account, this is a finding. Member servers and standalone or nondomain-joined systems: Open "Command Prompt". Run "Net user [username]", where [username] is the name of the emergency account. If "Account expires" has been defined and is not within 72 hours for an emergency administrator account, this is a finding.
Fix Text
Remove emergency administrator accounts after a crisis has been resolved or configure the accounts to automatically expire within 72 hours. Domain accounts can be configured with an account expiration date, under "Account" properties. Local accounts can be configured to expire with the command "Net user [username] /expires:[mm/dd/yyyy]", where [username] is the name of the temporary user account.