The default logs in Windows Server can be tweaked to provide a little better information. This is really helpful, for example, if you’re dumping your logs to a syslog server. Here’s a script that can make it happen with a few little tweaks to how we interpret data (to be run per host, just paste into a Powershell interface as an administrator): auditpol /set /subcategory:"Security State Change" /success:enable /failure:enable auditpol /set /subcategory:"Security System Extension" /success:enable /failure:enable auditpol /set /subcategory:"System Integrity" /success:enable /failure:enable auditpol /set /subcategory:"IPsec Driver" /success:disable /failure:disable auditpol /set /subcategory:"Other System Events" /success:disable /failure:enable auditpol /set /subcategory:"Logon" /success:enable /failure:enable auditpol /set /subcategory:"Logoff" /success:enable /failure:enable auditpol /set /subcategory:"Account Lockout" /success:enable…