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It's the button with the Windows icon in the lower-left corner. On newer versions of Windows, administrative privileges are often stripped when trying to access a computer remotely. You can fix this by editing the registry. This displays the regedit (Registry Editor) app.  Warning: Editing or deleting items in the Registry Editor can cause permanent damage to your operating system. Proceed at your own risk! This opens the Registry Editor app. You can use the folders in the sidebar to the left to navigate in the Registry editor. Use the following steps to navigate to the "System" folder in "Policies":  Double-click the HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE folder. Double-click the SOFTWARE folder. Double-click the Microsoft folder. Double-click the Windows folder. Double-click the CurrentVersion folder. Double-click the Policies folder. Double-click the System folder. Use the following steps to create a new DWORD value in the "System" folder.  Right-click a black spot in the window to the right of the folders in the sidebar. Hover over New. Click DWORD (32-bit) Value. When you create a new DWORD value, the name will be highlighted blue. Immediately type "LocalAccountTokenFilterPolicy" to rename the value. This displays a menu to the right of the value. This opens an editor window for the DWORD value. Use the box below "value data" to change the value from "0" to "1". This saves the DWORD value. You can now close the registry editor.
Click the Start button . Type regedit. Click Regedit. Navigate to the "System" folder in "Policies". Create a new DWORD value. Name the new DWORD value "LocalAccountTokenFilterPolicy". Right-click LocalAccountTokenFilterPolicy. Click Modify. Change the value data to "1". Click Ok.