Browsers

How To Check If A Windows Computer Accessed by Chrome Remote Desktop Remotely

Chrome Remote Desktop extension is a great tool to remote control your computer without the need of messing around the firewall if you use Chrome as your primary web browser. Many companies embrace the concept of working from home while some others are totally against it. If you have a strict policy in place that totally against it, here is how you can tell if a computer was used by Chrome Remote Desktop remotely.

Open Event Viewer on your Windows computer. You can open Start menu and type “Event Viewer” to search for it. And click it from the search result list to open it.

Then, go to Applications log under Windows Logs, and start looking for any entries with the source named as “chromeoting”. Open it up, you may find information like below:

Channel IP for client: user@gmail.com/chromotingxxxxxx ip='xx.xx.xxx.xxx:63117' host_ip='xxx.xxx.xx.xx:50895' channel="video' connection='stun'

That’s all you need to obtain to prove whether this computer was used by Chrome Remote Desktop remotely.

Note #1: this only works on a Windows computer.

Note #2: Chrome Remote Desktop uses both TCP and UDP to send and receive network packets. So you can block its traffic by blocking TCP port 443 and UDP 5222 (XMPP) on the firewall. But again, messing up with Firewall rules is never a good idea if you have other ways to do it.

edge

View Comments

  • Yeah, chrome remote desktop is good. However, recently I discovered another very good alternative: R-HUB remote support servers. It works on both MAC and Windows and is only one time cost as compared to hosted services.

  • Thanks for the information.
    I created a filter in Events Viewer to have direct access to those events.
    Today I was working normally with my PC and suddenly popped up the Chrome Remote Desktop bar saying someone is connected!
    It could have been myself playing with the phone and starting by mistake the last app used. But it scared me!
    The IP shows as unknown in Event Viewer :(
    Regards.

Share
Published by
edge

Recent Posts

Disable Copilot on Windows 11 via Group Policy GPO

If using Copilot right from the Taskbar isn't your thing, you should disable it. Even…

3 weeks ago

Setting Default Fonts in Word, Excel, Outlook, and PowerPoint via Group Policy

In an environment where standardizing things does matter, setting default fonts in Microsoft Office apps…

1 month ago

Wake-On-LAN (WOL) with Windows and PowerShell

Wake-On-LAN is a networking standard that lets you wake up a computer from either a…

2 months ago

How To Remove Restrictions Set in A Password-Protected PDF File

First of all, this is not to bypass a PDF file that requires a password…

2 months ago

How To Move My Outlook Navigation Bar Back From Left Back To the Bottom

Microsoft has been lurking about the idea of placing the Outlook navigation bar to the…

1 year ago

Headset with Microphone Echoing My Own Voice on Windows, What To Do?

One colleague came up to me the other day asking me to take look at…

1 year ago