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Service Permissions Reporter BETA, currently at version 0.5.2 and the only release published so far by Cjwdev, is a lightweight Windows utility designed to translate the cryptic Security Descriptor Definition Language (SDDL) strings returned by native tools such as sc.exe into a human-readable grid. Administrators who need to verify which accounts may start, stop, pause, query or change the configuration of a service can open the program, pick a local or remote machine, and instantly see a color-coded list of principals and their effective rights without memorizing SDDL abbreviations. The same view is offered for the Service Control Manager itself (scmanager), making it simple to audit whether overly broad permissions have been granted at the top of the service hierarchy. When an automation script or Group Policy still requires the raw SDDL string, one click copies it to the clipboard, bridging the gap between visual inspection and command-line deployment. Typical use cases include compliance scans, hardening checks before a server goes live, troubleshooting “Access Denied” errors during service deployment, and periodic reviews of privileged accounts on domain controllers or SQL hosts. Because the utility is still in BETA, additional features such as bulk export, filtering, or permission remediation are expected to appear in the final release. The program belongs to the System Administration category and runs on any modern Windows edition without installation. Service Permissions Reporter BETA is available for free on get.nero.com, with downloads provided via trusted Windows package sources (e.g. winget), always delivering the latest version, and supporting batch installation of multiple applications.
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