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rionnagel2017-12-05 18:10:33
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rionnagel, 2017-12-05 18:10:33

Chrome/Chromium windows home policies without GPO?

Case: set up a kiosk-like terminal on windows home (required on it), you can only use chrome or chromium-like browsers, access to all functions should be cut in the browser, except for selecting a site through bookmarks and the address bar, exit/minimize buttons and configured a list of sites to which there is access (respectively, with access blocking everywhere except this list).
Rummaged through a lot of information about setting policies without GPO and none of the options is acceptable for windows not entered into the domain. Zero response to editing the registry, nothing in chrome://policy. As far as I understand, with the help of master_preferences, it is impossible to sanely cut the capabilities of the browser, not to mention making a whitelist for sites. Using gpedit on a non-domain-joined PC doesn't work either. I would very much like the --managed-policy-file= flag to work and it would be possible to describe the requirements in json as in Linux, but I did not find such an opportunity (. Buying g suite is frank search, as well as using parental control through an online profile (without g suite doesn't have enough options.) In firefox, things like this were easily solved by simply creating and editing userchrome.css and userconent.css.
So this is the essence of the question - is it possible to force the use of chromium or chromium registry keys, or a policy config file without active directory on windows? Is there any other way out?

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rionnagel, 2019-07-31
@rionnagel

Chromium-based browsers have learned to cut everything both through the registry and through files with a description without connecting to AD.

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