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So to put it short. I rebuilt my old computer. I did this because I wanted to see if I could find out the cause of the blue screening. As my software knowledge now, is greater than before. As the computer was booting up, it hit me. I got the motherboard from a local highschool back when I attended it. That further explains why I cannot access any of the security settings. 

 

The motherboard is a (ASUS ABBXM-A) Or (ASUS A88XM-A) Whatever you want to call it.

 

If you have any solutions to my problem that do not involve buying a new motherboard, feel free to leave a reply.

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https://linustechtips.com/topic/1597693-kernel-security-check-failure/
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48 minutes ago, Ridoheru said:

I don't know, is it?

Is it? What are your trying to get into that requires a password? Windows? The BIOS? If the system came from somewhere where they'd likely have systems locked down, such as a school, they would typically require a password to get into the BIOS

idk anymore

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2 hours ago, Bubbles_TPB said:

Is it? What are your trying to get into that requires a password? Windows? The BIOS? If the system came from somewhere where they'd likely have systems locked down, such as a school, they would typically require a password to get into the BIOS

I don't have to enter a password for anything. It says windows security settings is restricted by my IT manager though. I think I need to lift that restriction in order to stop the blue screening.

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16 hours ago, Ridoheru said:

I don't have to enter a password for anything. It says windows security settings is restricted by my IT manager though. I think I need to lift that restriction in order to stop the blue screening.

Why do you think that?

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8 hours ago, Ridoheru said:

Can anyone here read?

You have said you want to find the cause of the blue screening in your original post then followed it up with a post saying you think you need to lift the security restrictions to stop the bluescreens. To me that says you have new information you haven’t passed.

 

Three things here:

-You never made it clear where the security restriction was in your original post which is why people asked. Don’t insult people trying to get clarity on what you’re asking.

-You seem to have an idea of what’s wrong or you seem to have additional information I don’t have about lacking admin access on your system. Which is why I asked a question. I’m happy to help, but in my line of work I don’t just help users do what they initially ask, I try figure out what they are actually trying to do first. This saves a lot of time and almost always gets the problem sorted out quickly. I’m not trying to be a dick.

-it’s against forum rules to assist in breaking security restrictions on anything. So really your best bet is to just reimage the hard drive/reinstall windows. 
 

Most likely answer to kernel security check is due to a critical driver or registry being corrupted. Which is sort of a best guess based on the age of the motherboard I’m guessing the system is on the original image the school ran it on and had been administratively locked down (which is critical information you implied but never explicitly provided.) So that’s why I’m recommending reimage/reinstallation if you want a fast answer and don’t want to provide more details.

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1 hour ago, Echothedolpin said:

You have said you want to find the cause of the blue screening in your original post then followed it up with a post saying you think you need to lift the security restrictions to stop the bluescreens. To me that says you have new information you haven’t passed.

 

Three things here:

-You never made it clear where the security restriction was in your original post which is why people asked. Don’t insult people trying to get clarity on what you’re asking.

-You seem to have an idea of what’s wrong or you seem to have additional information I don’t have about lacking admin access on your system. Which is why I asked a question. I’m happy to help, but in my line of work I don’t just help users do what they initially ask, I try figure out what they are actually trying to do first. This saves a lot of time and almost always gets the problem sorted out quickly. I’m not trying to be a dick.

-it’s against forum rules to assist in breaking security restrictions on anything. So really your best bet is to just reimage the hard drive/reinstall windows. 
 

Most likely answer to kernel security check is due to a critical driver or registry being corrupted. Which is sort of a best guess based on the age of the motherboard I’m guessing the system is on the original image the school ran it on and had been administratively locked down (which is critical information you implied but never explicitly provided.) So that’s why I’m recommending reimage/reinstallation if you want a fast answer and don’t want to provide more details.

Apologies for getting antsy. I'm purely guessing that getting past the security restriction will get rid of the blue screening. I also promise you I have no additional information. I put a new ssd and a whole new os on the drive yet, still the same issues. I am still unsure of the extent of the restrictions too, what should I check?

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10 hours ago, Ridoheru said:

Apologies for getting antsy. I'm purely guessing that getting past the security restriction will get rid of the blue screening. I also promise you I have no additional information. I put a new ssd and a whole new os on the drive yet, still the same issues. I am still unsure of the extent of the restrictions too, what should I check?

No worries! I hope my tone wasn’t too partially received!
 

What version of windows are using? And could you give us a list of all hardware, memory, Gpu, CPU, etc.?

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