These configurations may be restricted or handled by your company.
These configurations may be restricted or handled by your company.
I've encountered this notification on specific pages in the settings app and at certain times, and I'm also unable to set up anything in the Windows Defender app. After doing some research, it seems this issue typically occurs on work or school devices, but my personal gaming laptop is the one affected. I reached out to Microsoft for assistance, yet their support team couldn't resolve the problem even after resetting my Windows installation. I rely on my laptop for university projects, so a clean install wasn't an option. Since we don't have access to the Group Policy Editor in Windows 10 Home, I'm struggling to find a solution. I also experiment with mods for older games like MostWanted 2005, Skyrim, and Fallout, but sometimes these get removed by Defender, which limits my ability to manage them. I need the ability to enable and disable Defender manually so I can work with files without losing them. (Even when I turn off the antivirus, I must disable Windows Defender directly to regain access.) Please let me know if you can help. Thanks in advance.
Check if your device is linked to a Microsoft account and confirm whether it belongs to your university or personal email.
I don't understand how to grasp that section. Can you walk me through it? I haven't performed a fresh installation from the official Microsoft site yet. My current submissions are ongoing, and the software I use is large, taking a long time to download and install depending on my internet speed. I need to keep working on them daily, so I'm holding off on a clean install. If I reset everything with a fresh setup, will that fix the problem?
Laptops include a restore partition with the updated OS version from the manufacturer. To reinstall the operating system, you need to boot into that partition and install it along with all drivers. If you haven’t installed using a USB ISO, this shouldn’t be a problem. I suggest reaching out to Lenovo support. I performed a clean install without using the restore partition—I completely wiped it because it contained Windows 8.1 and I proceeded directly to a fresh installation. I also have similar settings for security features, like adding a pincode during login, but can’t because of the warning. I assumed it was due to not using the Lenovo OS, but just installing a clean OS and drivers from Lenovo. Given your issues also relate to Lenovo, but without a clean install, it might be linked to their drivers or BIOS.
I reached out to Lenovo for help with this problem. They seemed unsure about the solution and suggested checking Microsoft's tech support. Their assistance didn’t resolve the issue, so I ended up visiting the forum. I’m based in India, and I must admit it’s tough to get reliable help from support teams—they often lack the expertise beyond basic troubleshooting.