Some of the main problem we face with
Windows 10 and Windows 8 / 7, is its permissions issues! Most of them
think its annoying. Here are a few tips which will help resolve such
issues.
Most of the time you might find
difficult opening files from a external hard drive after upgrading to
Windows 7. Such cases you could try to give permission to that folder.
You don’t currently have permission to access this folder
1. Most of the times the folder permission or the Owner
would be set to “Trusted Installer” such cases you’ll get this message
that “You don’t currently have permission to access this folder”.
When you click on Continue it will say access denied and try again.
In such cases you could Take Ownership of the folder or file to open it or to get access to it. There are various methods to Take Ownership. The easiest way is to use the Take Ownership Shortcut on Context Menu.
To download this registry fix, visit WinVistaClub – or better still, download and use Ultimate Windows Tweaker to add it easily to your right click context menu.
One important thing you have to remember
about this is that you should use it wisely. The reason I am stressing
this point is, because I have seen lot of situation where people will
try to Take Ownership of System files or folders. Altering permission might cause your System to crash.
For instance, you might see Document and
Settings folder under C drive of Windows 7 computer. People who have
upgraded from Windows XP, might be not know about “Users” instead of
Document and Settings. So if they try to access it and will get the
permission error. Document and Settings it’s just a junction point for compatibility with older programs. Always stay away from Windows, Program Files etc.
2. Let’s say you gave
permission but it still fails to open or edit. The next thing I would do
is turn off UAC or User Account Control. Sometime UAC might block
permission. Make sure to turn it back on once you have carried out the
change.
How to Disable User Account Control?
1) Click the Windows Start button and then click Control Panel. The Control Panel appears
2) Select Large icons on the right-hand
side under the View by menu (if you are not already in Large icons
view). This will display the Control Panel features as icons. Locate and
click on User Accounts.
3) The User Accounts panel appears.
4) Click the Change User Accounts Control Settings option. The User Accounts Control Settings dialog box appears.
5) Windows 7 UAC settings have a slider to change between different notification levels
6) Change to Never notify
Note: A reboot of the computer will be required after choosing this setting.
Once you complete your Task change the slider to “Notify me only when programs try to make changes to my computer”.
3. If disabling that UAC didn’t do the trick, the next steps is to Enable the Built-in administrator
account. Built-in Administrator is a hidden administrator account on
Windows 7, which is created while installing the OS. There will be no
restrictions under this account. Make sure you disable it after using it.
1) Click the Windows Start button and type in CMD
2) Right Click on CMD and click on Run as administrator
3) Command prompt will open up then type in
net user administrator /active:yesHit Enter you’ll get a message “Command ran successfully”
Type net user administrator <Password>, and then press ENTER.
Note: Please replace the <Password> tag with your passwords which you want to set to administrator account.
To disable the administrator account type
net user administrator /active:no
4. If that fails then
something is wrong with your Operating System. Sometimes registry
settings might get messed up. In those cases we could try to reset the
default security permissions.
1) Click the Windows Start button and type in CMD
2) Right Click on CMD and click on Run as administrator
3) Command prompt will open up then type in
secedit /configure /cfg %windir%\inf\defltbase.inf /db defltbase.sdb /verboseCheck this Microsoft KB313222 for more info about this command.
Restart the computer and test it.
5. If that doesn’t help then try to run the System File Checker.
1) Click the Windows Start button and type in CMD
2) Right Click on CMD and click on Run as administrator
3) Command prompt will open up then type in SFC /SCANNOW
7. If none of the above steps helped then you might be looking at a corrupted operating system. Try to run a Repair Install or a Clean Install.
Hope something helps!
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