![]() Exchange servers are notorious for this issue, but there is other software and systems which also have problems with the wmic Win32_product command. It leans too heavily on Windows Defender and lacks many features I’d like to see in a top-quality firewall. Unfortunately, Webroot’s firewall doesn’t have much going for it. For most systems, this won't cause any issue, but depending on the software and the specific system, this can cause software to break or become corrupted. However, because Webroot focuses on trying to be unintrusive, you don’t get access to any of these settings. (Check the application event logs if you don't believe me.) All this happens before your actual command is carried out, so the wmic command is also slow. Invoking Win32_Product in any manner causes a validation of every single app installed on the machine and will perform a repair install of any app that fails validation. ![]() Push out the change to the policy, then simply disable the policy on the device and it will uninstall Webroot.Īs to your wmic script, it probably invokes the Win32_Product class to call the uninstall. If you have Webroot integration in DattoRMM and have the webroot policy assigned, edit the policy and make sure the checkbox for "Uninstall Webroot when policy is removed" is selected. When you boot the system in Safe Mode, Webroot automatically switches to the unmanaged profile. Webroot has to be in an unmanaged state in order to uninstall it from the control panel.
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