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EOS Utility permission settings for non-administrative users

continu8
Apprentice

I am trying to use EOS Utility for remote shooting connected via USB.  Unless my user is a local administrator it will not recognize the camera (R100).  It worked as a member of Power Users on Windows 10, but not on Windows 11.  Due to company policies, it is an ABSOLUTE requirement that my photographers are not local administrators of the computer.  

4 REPLIES 4

Do company policies allow connecting a card reader?   I don't know enough about the EOS Utility permissions requirements to address your requirements in Windows - sorry about that - but I am thinking there might be a workaround for copying files directly from the card that would comply with your security requirements.


>> Owns/Owned both Canon EOS mirrorless full-frame and APS-C cameras and associated RF, RF-S and EF adapted lenses - inventory tends to change on short notice. Same for flashes, tripods, bags, straps, etc.
Plus>> Canon imagePROGRAF PRO-1100 Printer
>>The opinions and assistance are my own. Please don't blame Canon for any mistakes on my part.

And if that solution isn't workable, there are a number of other way to satisfy security via role-based access control, and perhaps some sort of controlled interface.  Applications sometimes are just not developed for a multi-user, multi-level access environment.  In those cases file management is often an easier solution.  I don't know your environment well enough to make specific suggestions, but a single laptop might be acceptable to your security administrators as a "digital sandbox" and they could set up firewall rules to protect the primary network from the the "untrusted" laptop in the sandbox. 

Hopefully someone will give you a satisfactory solution for the EOS Utility, but if not, there might be file-based workarounds that would be acceptable to your security administrator and still workable and no too onerous on productivity for workflow.


>> Owns/Owned both Canon EOS mirrorless full-frame and APS-C cameras and associated RF, RF-S and EF adapted lenses - inventory tends to change on short notice. Same for flashes, tripods, bags, straps, etc.
Plus>> Canon imagePROGRAF PRO-1100 Printer
>>The opinions and assistance are my own. Please don't blame Canon for any mistakes on my part.

My photographers would string me up if I took away remote shooting, so file and card based approaches won't work here.  The big issue here is that they worked on Windows 10, but we're upgrading our fleet to Windows 11 and that seems to break EOS Utility.  We've also just ordered 15 new laptops and I need to decide what cameras to buy.  Half of my photographers want Canon, the others want Nikon.  I'd prefer Canon, but the Nikon software just works, so unless I find a simple solution for EOS Utility, it won't be up to me.  I'm really hoping someone can just tell me what files/registry settings EOS Utility requires read/write access to and I'll just create a GPO to set those permissions.

Thanks for the quick reply.  Chatting up the Canon Community isn't really talking straight to Canon unless one of the Canon moderators sees the post and/or one of the Canon technical folks happens upon it. I will flag your post to the moderator, but suggest that you call Canon direct to address your issue - I think either (800) 652-2666 or 800-385-2155 option 3 will get you to Canon.


>> Owns/Owned both Canon EOS mirrorless full-frame and APS-C cameras and associated RF, RF-S and EF adapted lenses - inventory tends to change on short notice. Same for flashes, tripods, bags, straps, etc.
Plus>> Canon imagePROGRAF PRO-1100 Printer
>>The opinions and assistance are my own. Please don't blame Canon for any mistakes on my part.
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