This will likely effect no one outside corp IT, but just in case...
When Windows is installed setup assigns a unique Security ID [SID] for that copy of Windows. If you clone or restore a full image backup of a hard disk/SSD with Windows on it to another hard disk/SSD, that SID is copied along with everything else. 99% of the time that's just what you want to happen because you're replacing the hard disk/SSD, or restoring a backup because something went wrong. You can now have problems however if you use a cloned copy of Windows on another PC/laptop and both devices are in use. This is due to some security hardening that Microsoft's just introduced. In that case the solution is to change one of the SIDs.
Microsoft recommends using Sysprep, which comes with several caveats. There's a 3rd party tool you can use without those, and one web site claims you can change the SID in the registry at: HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\ SOFTWARE\ Microsoft\ Windows NT\ CurrentVersion\ ProfioleList\ . The caveat there is I believe you'd have to boot to a USB drive running WinPE or Windows To Go, load the registry hive in Regedit, make whatever changes, then reboot into Windows. Whichever method you chose you'd definitely want to have an image backup that you know you can restore.
learn.microsoft[.]com/en-us/windows-hardware/manufacture/desktop/sysprep--generalize--a-windows-installation?view=windows-11
stratesave[.]com/html/sidchg.html