LogMeIn Pro for Windows:
I am willing to believe it may simply be my inability to cull what I need from page after page related to LOCAL Windows users' rights, but I think I have exhausted the knowledge base and FAQ's on this issue.
LogMeIn very nicely has a useful feature where the [Windows] host can be set up to require an 'Accept' or 'Deny' prompt prior to allowing a remote user to perform remote control. Lovely. It works great.
However, that prompt does not apply to the File Transfer dialog. If a user has the right to login, that user can slip in and transfer files at will.
Has anyone found a way to either suppress file transfer, all together [NOT preferable, and LogMeIn Free is not an option], or better yet, to have a prompt regulate whether the user can transfer files?
I have played with the 'Specific Permissions' settings, but those are specifically related to local Windows users. Even then, I dinked around with user pcname\LogMeInRemoteUser's file permissions and I could still go buck wild with file transfers.
This is a deal-breaker for a customer I support. They not only want to regulate who can remotely control the PC but also who can access and manipulate files via the File Transfer dialog. I.e., they want the file-transfer client to obey an 'Accept/Reject' prompt just like the remote control client does.
Thank you for your thoughts.