Anyway, if you are in a similar situation where you don’t know the password to uninstall Endpoint Protection, then you’ll be happy to know of a quick way to bypass the password and still uninstall the program. Note: If the CleanWipe utility fails to remove Symantec Endpoint Protection, please proceed through the manual uninstall. It’s probably not that, unless your admin is very lazy, but worth a try. Though AFAIK the deployment tasks weren't deleted, only the services stopped and SCCM related programs uninstalled. I tried to uncheck the services and startup programs for it using MSCONFIG to no avail.įinally, I tried to uninstall it and I couldn’t even do that! The program was password protected so that no sane human being could uninstall the crap! I understand that the password is there to prevent employees from uninstalling it, but if you can’t do any work because your computer is unbearably slow, then it should at least allow the uninstall and notify the administrator.Īlso, you should try the default password of symantec or Symantec, with a capital S. Problem: System Center Endpoint Protection keeps deploying itself from SCCM to the computers and servers after I manually delete them, even if the SCCM server got completely removed recently. My computer never fell from 100% CPU usage when the program was running. The worst part about the program is its need to eat up all the processor power on your computer.
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