In windows 2000, when you copy a file, the security permissions for the file are inherited from the destination directory. This means that security over the file might change. As an administrator or a security officer, you need to be aware and manage these these copies to ensure that a file with a high level of security isn't copied to a directory that has a lower level of security.
When a file is moved, however, it keeps the specifiec file permissions and doen't get any others, regardless of where it is placed within the windows 2000 partition it resides on. Moving a file onto a seperate disk partition will mean the security might change as it will ingerit the rules of the directory it is placed into. After any file copy operation, verify that the level of control remains and isn't changed.
Sams Teach Yourself Microsoft Windows 2000 Server in 21 days, Managing Files and Using the Distributed File System. Excellect book, well worth the $30. Good luck. Glen A. Johnson
Microsoft Certified Professional
glen@nellsgiftbox.com
"A person often meets his destiny on the road he took to avoid it."
Jean de La Fontaine (1621-1695); French poet.