(Note: /S may still require a password if policy demands it.)
The technical struggle to uninstall the agent often leads users into ethical gray areas. On personal devices, the argument for removal is strong: users feel entitled to full control over hardware they own. Yet, in the context of school-issued Chromebooks or corporate workstations, the device is property of the organization. Attempting to circumvent the filter or forcibly uninstall the agent is technically a violation of the acceptable use policy and, in some jurisdictions, could be construed as unauthorized modification of computer systems. This highlights a critical tension in digital citizenship. While the filter can feel intrusive, it is deployed to satisfy legal requirements, such as the Children's Internet Protection Act (CIPA) in the United States, which mandates filtering to protect minors from harmful content. Therefore, the uninstall process is not just a technical hurdle, but a check on user privilege. lightspeed filter agent uninstall
| Error Message | Likely Cause | Solution | |----------------------------------------|----------------------------------|-----------------------------------------------| | "Uninstall blocked by policy" | Tamper protection + no password | Use management console to disable protection. | | "Missing uninstall executable" | Corrupted install | Reinstall agent, then uninstall properly. | | "Access denied (0x80070005)" | Insufficient privileges | Run as SYSTEM or local admin. | | "Filter driver still active after reboot" | File system minifilter remains | fltmc unload lsfilter (admin CMD). | (Note: /S may still require a password if policy demands it