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Sep is uninstalled from Programs and Features... so build a application collection in SCCM to detect and uninstall. You will have to provide the password to disable SEP to uninstall... You will need to refer to SCCM guides on building a collection to uninstall a password protected App.
If you're managing SEP Application Deployment in SCCM you will need to Disable, Delete, Deprecate all Deployments and Task Sequences associated.
If SEP Client is corrupted... You will know when you monitor the Uninstall Collection status in SCCM...
You need to remove symantec password uninstall first in all clients, can use symantec console.
And deploy a command to uninstall.
I think is the same for all versions.
Sep is uninstalled from Programs and Features... so build a application collection in SCCM to detect and uninstall. You will have to provide the password to disable SEP to uninstall... You will need to refer to SCCM guides on building a collection to uninstall a password protected App.
If you're managing SEP Application Deployment in SCCM you will need to Disable, Delete, Deprecate all Deployments and Task Sequences associated.
If SEP Client is corrupted... You will know when you monitor the Uninstall Collection status in SCCM. You will then need to determine what versions you have installed... and manually run the SEP "CleanWipe" removal tool per version of SEP installed. CleanWipe does not support command line use; you must manually run CleanWipe.