I just got some mail from a reader who wants to replace GINA to add a custom logo. This person wanted to know if a tutorial existed for this purpose, and mentioned that they weren't very good at C++ programming.
Replacing GINA is a major undertaking, even if you only want to change the look and feel of the logon screen. This is a highly sensitive part of the security system in Windows, and if you screw it up, you can cause the user's system to fail in nasty ways, or worse, allow a bad guy to steal user credentials from those logging in using a vulnerable, modified GINA.
So if all you want to do is “skin” the GINA so it has a custom logo, perhaps you should take the much, much simpler route of replacing the logon desktop background with one that has your company logo on it. You can do this by changing one registry value, and there's even a knowledge base article that explains how to do it.
Just because you can replace GINA doesn't mean you should!
Posted
Jun 08 2007, 06:01 AM
by
keith-brown