Krizalid99v2
Technical User
- Sep 8, 2005
- 6
Operating System is Windows XP Home Edition
The system has one physical hard drive which is partitioned into two drives, C: and D: drive. The OS has 4 User accounts/profiles.
The owner of the system (the Administrator) wanted to set permissions so that the 'Guest' account cannot access specified drives and folders. We did this by going into Safe Mode, right-clicking onto a drive, going into the 'Security' tab and doing the job there (you may remember my thread a week ago asking how to do this).
So in the Security tab section, I tried to figure out which username belonged to which group as it didn't tell you, so I tried guessing and checking all the boxes to Deny for the groups which wasn't an Administrator. I then returned them to normal and decided to add the Guest account into the Group section (by clicking the Add button, typing in the user name, click Check Names, and OK) and then check all the boxes of Deny to this user account.
After I restarted and logged into the Guest account it was fine, as you cannot access the D: anymore. Seems fine, until I logged in using the main account which has Administrator privileges, and found out that I couldn't access the D: either - despite having Administrator status. So after that I went back into Safe mode, into the 'real' Admistrator account (the one that doesn't appear in normal mode), and checked all the Allow boxes for every group, hoping it would fix it. I then restarted the machine, went into the main user account and found out I still cannot access the D: drive, where all the personal files are.
I went back into Safe Mode, back into the 'Security' tab and every Group's permissions are set to 'Allow', except for the Users (-----/Users) group which only have some permissions set to Allow - but that's normal anyway by default. Also I have noticed the groups 'CREATOR OWNER' and 'Everyone' have all it's boxes blanked out, but has the 'Special Permissions' checked, which you cannot change. Could that have something to do with the problem?
Can anyone help me fix this? What's the problem? Are there any hidden Groups/Usernames I have to bring up and set permissions? Is it a fault of the OS?
Any help will be most appreciated, thanks for your time.
The system has one physical hard drive which is partitioned into two drives, C: and D: drive. The OS has 4 User accounts/profiles.
The owner of the system (the Administrator) wanted to set permissions so that the 'Guest' account cannot access specified drives and folders. We did this by going into Safe Mode, right-clicking onto a drive, going into the 'Security' tab and doing the job there (you may remember my thread a week ago asking how to do this).
So in the Security tab section, I tried to figure out which username belonged to which group as it didn't tell you, so I tried guessing and checking all the boxes to Deny for the groups which wasn't an Administrator. I then returned them to normal and decided to add the Guest account into the Group section (by clicking the Add button, typing in the user name, click Check Names, and OK) and then check all the boxes of Deny to this user account.
After I restarted and logged into the Guest account it was fine, as you cannot access the D: anymore. Seems fine, until I logged in using the main account which has Administrator privileges, and found out that I couldn't access the D: either - despite having Administrator status. So after that I went back into Safe mode, into the 'real' Admistrator account (the one that doesn't appear in normal mode), and checked all the Allow boxes for every group, hoping it would fix it. I then restarted the machine, went into the main user account and found out I still cannot access the D: drive, where all the personal files are.
I went back into Safe Mode, back into the 'Security' tab and every Group's permissions are set to 'Allow', except for the Users (-----/Users) group which only have some permissions set to Allow - but that's normal anyway by default. Also I have noticed the groups 'CREATOR OWNER' and 'Everyone' have all it's boxes blanked out, but has the 'Special Permissions' checked, which you cannot change. Could that have something to do with the problem?
Can anyone help me fix this? What's the problem? Are there any hidden Groups/Usernames I have to bring up and set permissions? Is it a fault of the OS?
Any help will be most appreciated, thanks for your time.