How to leave Azure AD, when Microsoft account got joined to it by exchange to office 365 migrationOffice 365...
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How to leave Azure AD, when Microsoft account got joined to it by exchange to office 365 migration
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Our company had a hosted Microsoft Exchange solution for our emails, and this was migrated by a 3rd party company to Office 365, and in that process they created a Azure Active Directory for our domain, and apparently also for each of our emails.
We didnt have any AD going on locally, and also isn't planning on it.
Before they migrated from a hosted exchange, i had created a microsoft account on with my work email, which I also used to login into windows. It integrated nicely into Visual Studio etc.
But now I don't have full access to my pc anymore, although im still a administrator locally.
So how do i leave this Azure AD, and regain normal full admin rights to my pc?
Example of "managed by your organization"
Showing that its joined to Azure AD
When trying to click "Disconnect" on that Azure ID.
Edit:
We don't use any AD, locally or azure. An external company was hosting our Exchange server previously, the same company migrated our hosted Exchange server email accounts to Office 365. (So I have no access to the Azure AD.) And in that process, they also created an Azure AD. (Their tech guy said they had to do that. If thats true or not, iI don't know).
I'm using windows mail to connect to my email account (not outlook), and I just tried removing it, and adding it again, as an Office 365 account, and in that process it said something about group policies. windows mail prompt
Here are the group memberships of my user:
Group memberships
This is the error im getting, when im trying to enable/disable a task related to windows update, in the task scheduler. task scheduler permission denied
windows-10 exchange office365 microsoft-account azure-activedirectory
|
show 3 more comments
Our company had a hosted Microsoft Exchange solution for our emails, and this was migrated by a 3rd party company to Office 365, and in that process they created a Azure Active Directory for our domain, and apparently also for each of our emails.
We didnt have any AD going on locally, and also isn't planning on it.
Before they migrated from a hosted exchange, i had created a microsoft account on with my work email, which I also used to login into windows. It integrated nicely into Visual Studio etc.
But now I don't have full access to my pc anymore, although im still a administrator locally.
So how do i leave this Azure AD, and regain normal full admin rights to my pc?
Example of "managed by your organization"
Showing that its joined to Azure AD
When trying to click "Disconnect" on that Azure ID.
Edit:
We don't use any AD, locally or azure. An external company was hosting our Exchange server previously, the same company migrated our hosted Exchange server email accounts to Office 365. (So I have no access to the Azure AD.) And in that process, they also created an Azure AD. (Their tech guy said they had to do that. If thats true or not, iI don't know).
I'm using windows mail to connect to my email account (not outlook), and I just tried removing it, and adding it again, as an Office 365 account, and in that process it said something about group policies. windows mail prompt
Here are the group memberships of my user:
Group memberships
This is the error im getting, when im trying to enable/disable a task related to windows update, in the task scheduler. task scheduler permission denied
windows-10 exchange office365 microsoft-account azure-activedirectory
1
It has to be disconnected from the Azure AD setup wizard. You can also disconnect a single user, but if AD sync is active, and that AD user is not removed, a sync will put it back to synced status rather than cloud status. If you have no access to the Azure AD sync setup part, you can remove the sync user or change the password of the admin account that was used to break the sync.
– LPChip
Jan 24 at 13:39
@LPChip the op said they don’t have local AD, so no AD Sync.
– Appleoddity
Jan 24 at 14:54
@Appleoddity they don't have it, but that external company has. There is a sync somewhere, otherwise you don't see a "this setting is managed by your organization".
– LPChip
Jan 24 at 14:58
Joining your device to Azure AD has no impact on your admin status on your computer. There are many advantages to having your machine connected to your organization’s Azure AD - SSO; BitLocker key backup; MFA bypass; enterprise state roaming, etc. When you setup Office 365, you were probably asked if you wanted to allow your org to manage the PC. You said yes. This didn’t change any admin status at all on your PC. So more detail about WHY you think you aren’t an admin is needed.
– Appleoddity
Jan 24 at 14:59
@LPChip AD Sync is not required for this feature. This is called Azure AD Join, and it’s a part of Azure AD and Windows 10. There is no reason to think there is an “external company.” Their cloud hosted exchange was migrated to Office 365, part of that includes setup of Azure AD and cloud user accounts. When you connect Office to Office 365 it asks you if you want to allow the device to be managed. That’s it. No Azure AD sync needed, nor any active directory.
– Appleoddity
Jan 24 at 15:04
|
show 3 more comments
Our company had a hosted Microsoft Exchange solution for our emails, and this was migrated by a 3rd party company to Office 365, and in that process they created a Azure Active Directory for our domain, and apparently also for each of our emails.
We didnt have any AD going on locally, and also isn't planning on it.
Before they migrated from a hosted exchange, i had created a microsoft account on with my work email, which I also used to login into windows. It integrated nicely into Visual Studio etc.
But now I don't have full access to my pc anymore, although im still a administrator locally.
So how do i leave this Azure AD, and regain normal full admin rights to my pc?
Example of "managed by your organization"
Showing that its joined to Azure AD
When trying to click "Disconnect" on that Azure ID.
Edit:
We don't use any AD, locally or azure. An external company was hosting our Exchange server previously, the same company migrated our hosted Exchange server email accounts to Office 365. (So I have no access to the Azure AD.) And in that process, they also created an Azure AD. (Their tech guy said they had to do that. If thats true or not, iI don't know).
I'm using windows mail to connect to my email account (not outlook), and I just tried removing it, and adding it again, as an Office 365 account, and in that process it said something about group policies. windows mail prompt
Here are the group memberships of my user:
Group memberships
This is the error im getting, when im trying to enable/disable a task related to windows update, in the task scheduler. task scheduler permission denied
windows-10 exchange office365 microsoft-account azure-activedirectory
Our company had a hosted Microsoft Exchange solution for our emails, and this was migrated by a 3rd party company to Office 365, and in that process they created a Azure Active Directory for our domain, and apparently also for each of our emails.
We didnt have any AD going on locally, and also isn't planning on it.
Before they migrated from a hosted exchange, i had created a microsoft account on with my work email, which I also used to login into windows. It integrated nicely into Visual Studio etc.
But now I don't have full access to my pc anymore, although im still a administrator locally.
So how do i leave this Azure AD, and regain normal full admin rights to my pc?
Example of "managed by your organization"
Showing that its joined to Azure AD
When trying to click "Disconnect" on that Azure ID.
Edit:
We don't use any AD, locally or azure. An external company was hosting our Exchange server previously, the same company migrated our hosted Exchange server email accounts to Office 365. (So I have no access to the Azure AD.) And in that process, they also created an Azure AD. (Their tech guy said they had to do that. If thats true or not, iI don't know).
I'm using windows mail to connect to my email account (not outlook), and I just tried removing it, and adding it again, as an Office 365 account, and in that process it said something about group policies. windows mail prompt
Here are the group memberships of my user:
Group memberships
This is the error im getting, when im trying to enable/disable a task related to windows update, in the task scheduler. task scheduler permission denied
windows-10 exchange office365 microsoft-account azure-activedirectory
windows-10 exchange office365 microsoft-account azure-activedirectory
edited Jan 24 at 15:36
Djensen
asked Jan 24 at 13:29
DjensenDjensen
1012
1012
1
It has to be disconnected from the Azure AD setup wizard. You can also disconnect a single user, but if AD sync is active, and that AD user is not removed, a sync will put it back to synced status rather than cloud status. If you have no access to the Azure AD sync setup part, you can remove the sync user or change the password of the admin account that was used to break the sync.
– LPChip
Jan 24 at 13:39
@LPChip the op said they don’t have local AD, so no AD Sync.
– Appleoddity
Jan 24 at 14:54
@Appleoddity they don't have it, but that external company has. There is a sync somewhere, otherwise you don't see a "this setting is managed by your organization".
– LPChip
Jan 24 at 14:58
Joining your device to Azure AD has no impact on your admin status on your computer. There are many advantages to having your machine connected to your organization’s Azure AD - SSO; BitLocker key backup; MFA bypass; enterprise state roaming, etc. When you setup Office 365, you were probably asked if you wanted to allow your org to manage the PC. You said yes. This didn’t change any admin status at all on your PC. So more detail about WHY you think you aren’t an admin is needed.
– Appleoddity
Jan 24 at 14:59
@LPChip AD Sync is not required for this feature. This is called Azure AD Join, and it’s a part of Azure AD and Windows 10. There is no reason to think there is an “external company.” Their cloud hosted exchange was migrated to Office 365, part of that includes setup of Azure AD and cloud user accounts. When you connect Office to Office 365 it asks you if you want to allow the device to be managed. That’s it. No Azure AD sync needed, nor any active directory.
– Appleoddity
Jan 24 at 15:04
|
show 3 more comments
1
It has to be disconnected from the Azure AD setup wizard. You can also disconnect a single user, but if AD sync is active, and that AD user is not removed, a sync will put it back to synced status rather than cloud status. If you have no access to the Azure AD sync setup part, you can remove the sync user or change the password of the admin account that was used to break the sync.
– LPChip
Jan 24 at 13:39
@LPChip the op said they don’t have local AD, so no AD Sync.
– Appleoddity
Jan 24 at 14:54
@Appleoddity they don't have it, but that external company has. There is a sync somewhere, otherwise you don't see a "this setting is managed by your organization".
– LPChip
Jan 24 at 14:58
Joining your device to Azure AD has no impact on your admin status on your computer. There are many advantages to having your machine connected to your organization’s Azure AD - SSO; BitLocker key backup; MFA bypass; enterprise state roaming, etc. When you setup Office 365, you were probably asked if you wanted to allow your org to manage the PC. You said yes. This didn’t change any admin status at all on your PC. So more detail about WHY you think you aren’t an admin is needed.
– Appleoddity
Jan 24 at 14:59
@LPChip AD Sync is not required for this feature. This is called Azure AD Join, and it’s a part of Azure AD and Windows 10. There is no reason to think there is an “external company.” Their cloud hosted exchange was migrated to Office 365, part of that includes setup of Azure AD and cloud user accounts. When you connect Office to Office 365 it asks you if you want to allow the device to be managed. That’s it. No Azure AD sync needed, nor any active directory.
– Appleoddity
Jan 24 at 15:04
1
1
It has to be disconnected from the Azure AD setup wizard. You can also disconnect a single user, but if AD sync is active, and that AD user is not removed, a sync will put it back to synced status rather than cloud status. If you have no access to the Azure AD sync setup part, you can remove the sync user or change the password of the admin account that was used to break the sync.
– LPChip
Jan 24 at 13:39
It has to be disconnected from the Azure AD setup wizard. You can also disconnect a single user, but if AD sync is active, and that AD user is not removed, a sync will put it back to synced status rather than cloud status. If you have no access to the Azure AD sync setup part, you can remove the sync user or change the password of the admin account that was used to break the sync.
– LPChip
Jan 24 at 13:39
@LPChip the op said they don’t have local AD, so no AD Sync.
– Appleoddity
Jan 24 at 14:54
@LPChip the op said they don’t have local AD, so no AD Sync.
– Appleoddity
Jan 24 at 14:54
@Appleoddity they don't have it, but that external company has. There is a sync somewhere, otherwise you don't see a "this setting is managed by your organization".
– LPChip
Jan 24 at 14:58
@Appleoddity they don't have it, but that external company has. There is a sync somewhere, otherwise you don't see a "this setting is managed by your organization".
– LPChip
Jan 24 at 14:58
Joining your device to Azure AD has no impact on your admin status on your computer. There are many advantages to having your machine connected to your organization’s Azure AD - SSO; BitLocker key backup; MFA bypass; enterprise state roaming, etc. When you setup Office 365, you were probably asked if you wanted to allow your org to manage the PC. You said yes. This didn’t change any admin status at all on your PC. So more detail about WHY you think you aren’t an admin is needed.
– Appleoddity
Jan 24 at 14:59
Joining your device to Azure AD has no impact on your admin status on your computer. There are many advantages to having your machine connected to your organization’s Azure AD - SSO; BitLocker key backup; MFA bypass; enterprise state roaming, etc. When you setup Office 365, you were probably asked if you wanted to allow your org to manage the PC. You said yes. This didn’t change any admin status at all on your PC. So more detail about WHY you think you aren’t an admin is needed.
– Appleoddity
Jan 24 at 14:59
@LPChip AD Sync is not required for this feature. This is called Azure AD Join, and it’s a part of Azure AD and Windows 10. There is no reason to think there is an “external company.” Their cloud hosted exchange was migrated to Office 365, part of that includes setup of Azure AD and cloud user accounts. When you connect Office to Office 365 it asks you if you want to allow the device to be managed. That’s it. No Azure AD sync needed, nor any active directory.
– Appleoddity
Jan 24 at 15:04
@LPChip AD Sync is not required for this feature. This is called Azure AD Join, and it’s a part of Azure AD and Windows 10. There is no reason to think there is an “external company.” Their cloud hosted exchange was migrated to Office 365, part of that includes setup of Azure AD and cloud user accounts. When you connect Office to Office 365 it asks you if you want to allow the device to be managed. That’s it. No Azure AD sync needed, nor any active directory.
– Appleoddity
Jan 24 at 15:04
|
show 3 more comments
1 Answer
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You can still access local accounts on the pc by typing '.' onto username followed by username. For example, if your local account is called 'Administrator', you would type '.Administrator' into the usernameemail address login box. Then input appropriate password.
The '.' tells the pc you're trying to access a local account.
I am also aware I am only addressing a part of your question. Your computer is either registered or actually joined to azure. There is a difference. In the first scenario, you would be able to disconnect from azure and in the second case, the person who initially joined the device will have to disconnect to disconnect all users on that device.
Either way, if you're trying to do something as an administrator, try logging in with your local account using the format mentioned earlier; otherwise, contact your helpdesk/IT.
New contributor
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You can still access local accounts on the pc by typing '.' onto username followed by username. For example, if your local account is called 'Administrator', you would type '.Administrator' into the usernameemail address login box. Then input appropriate password.
The '.' tells the pc you're trying to access a local account.
I am also aware I am only addressing a part of your question. Your computer is either registered or actually joined to azure. There is a difference. In the first scenario, you would be able to disconnect from azure and in the second case, the person who initially joined the device will have to disconnect to disconnect all users on that device.
Either way, if you're trying to do something as an administrator, try logging in with your local account using the format mentioned earlier; otherwise, contact your helpdesk/IT.
New contributor
add a comment |
You can still access local accounts on the pc by typing '.' onto username followed by username. For example, if your local account is called 'Administrator', you would type '.Administrator' into the usernameemail address login box. Then input appropriate password.
The '.' tells the pc you're trying to access a local account.
I am also aware I am only addressing a part of your question. Your computer is either registered or actually joined to azure. There is a difference. In the first scenario, you would be able to disconnect from azure and in the second case, the person who initially joined the device will have to disconnect to disconnect all users on that device.
Either way, if you're trying to do something as an administrator, try logging in with your local account using the format mentioned earlier; otherwise, contact your helpdesk/IT.
New contributor
add a comment |
You can still access local accounts on the pc by typing '.' onto username followed by username. For example, if your local account is called 'Administrator', you would type '.Administrator' into the usernameemail address login box. Then input appropriate password.
The '.' tells the pc you're trying to access a local account.
I am also aware I am only addressing a part of your question. Your computer is either registered or actually joined to azure. There is a difference. In the first scenario, you would be able to disconnect from azure and in the second case, the person who initially joined the device will have to disconnect to disconnect all users on that device.
Either way, if you're trying to do something as an administrator, try logging in with your local account using the format mentioned earlier; otherwise, contact your helpdesk/IT.
New contributor
You can still access local accounts on the pc by typing '.' onto username followed by username. For example, if your local account is called 'Administrator', you would type '.Administrator' into the usernameemail address login box. Then input appropriate password.
The '.' tells the pc you're trying to access a local account.
I am also aware I am only addressing a part of your question. Your computer is either registered or actually joined to azure. There is a difference. In the first scenario, you would be able to disconnect from azure and in the second case, the person who initially joined the device will have to disconnect to disconnect all users on that device.
Either way, if you're trying to do something as an administrator, try logging in with your local account using the format mentioned earlier; otherwise, contact your helpdesk/IT.
New contributor
New contributor
answered 6 hours ago
StoicMStoicM
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It has to be disconnected from the Azure AD setup wizard. You can also disconnect a single user, but if AD sync is active, and that AD user is not removed, a sync will put it back to synced status rather than cloud status. If you have no access to the Azure AD sync setup part, you can remove the sync user or change the password of the admin account that was used to break the sync.
– LPChip
Jan 24 at 13:39
@LPChip the op said they don’t have local AD, so no AD Sync.
– Appleoddity
Jan 24 at 14:54
@Appleoddity they don't have it, but that external company has. There is a sync somewhere, otherwise you don't see a "this setting is managed by your organization".
– LPChip
Jan 24 at 14:58
Joining your device to Azure AD has no impact on your admin status on your computer. There are many advantages to having your machine connected to your organization’s Azure AD - SSO; BitLocker key backup; MFA bypass; enterprise state roaming, etc. When you setup Office 365, you were probably asked if you wanted to allow your org to manage the PC. You said yes. This didn’t change any admin status at all on your PC. So more detail about WHY you think you aren’t an admin is needed.
– Appleoddity
Jan 24 at 14:59
@LPChip AD Sync is not required for this feature. This is called Azure AD Join, and it’s a part of Azure AD and Windows 10. There is no reason to think there is an “external company.” Their cloud hosted exchange was migrated to Office 365, part of that includes setup of Azure AD and cloud user accounts. When you connect Office to Office 365 it asks you if you want to allow the device to be managed. That’s it. No Azure AD sync needed, nor any active directory.
– Appleoddity
Jan 24 at 15:04