The standard TeamViewer client operates in "User Mode." It relies on the logged-in user’s session. If the user logs off, the client often terminates or loses graphical display capabilities.
When you connect from your controller device, the TeamViewer router matches your account credentials. Because the client is bound to your account (Exclusive), the system bypasses the random password generation and the "Accept/Deny" popup. Instead, it initiates a direct, encrypted tunnel using your pre-assigned Easy Access or Personal Password . teamviewer full exclusive client
The installs a kernel-level driver and a Windows Service (or systemd service on Linux). It binds to the Session 0 (the system session) rather than the user session. The standard TeamViewer client operates in "User Mode
| Feature | Security Impact | | :--- | :--- | | | Sessions are encrypted key exchange. TeamViewer routers cannot see your data. | | 2FA (Two-Factor Authentication) | Mandatory for exclusive accounts. Without a TOTP code, the client will not grant access. | | Black & White Lists | You can restrict connections to specific account IDs. Only your account can connect. | | Session Timeout Policies | You can set the client to disconnect after 1 hour of inactivity. | | Remote User Notification (Lawful Intercept) | Even in Exclusive mode, the remote user sees a small tray icon notification that "Admin is connected." It is impossible to hide completely. | Because the client is bound to your account
TeamViewer_Full.msi /quiet /norestart CUSTOMCONFIGID=Your_Exclusive_Config_ID ASSIGNMENTOPTIONS="--alias Desktop-01 --group IT_Infrastructure --grant-easy-access" Once installed, open the client. The title bar should read: "TeamViewer (Exclusive Mode) – Ready to connect (unattended access)." You will notice that the "Your ID" field is greyed out—you cannot change it. This confirms the exclusive binding. Part 5: Security – Is the Exclusive Client Safe? Many administrators hesitate to use unattended, exclusive access. "What if someone hacks my account? They would have silent access to every machine."
No, not for commercial use.