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Security question - C$ share, permissions
Dear All I am currently working towards my NT Workstation 4.0 exam and am having difficulties in understanding NTFS file and folder permissions. I have read various Resource Kits, Manuals and Knowledge base articles and am still unsure of this area. Having searched on the Microsoft Knowledge base Article ID:

Account Inheriting Permissions
david
epsom dot com dot au david@epsomdotcomdotau microsoft public access security Generally, you can't write to these tables, and you don't care if people read them, so no, I don't worry about permissions on them: the default value is good enough. The particular problem with making an mde in A97 comes about

Remove Sharepoint Admin user permissions from survey...
You can change the permissions by changing these options to none rather than owner. The most reliable way is to issue another :SP-NEWTAB, but you can change permissions on the fly. This won't affect the permission of existing jobs, but subsequent ones should have the more open permissions that you are used to.

Display Permissions
"Replace permission entries on all child objects..." both got checked, then Apply clicked < the machine seemed to be making a lot of changes to file attributes for a few seconds > but when I went over to the other machine, I still could not delete/rename files on the other machine. Simon, are you aware that there

Permissions and laptops getting all authoratarian on my ass
Hank Arnold (MVP) rasi...@aol.com microsoft public windows terminal_services Alice Kupcik [MSFT] wrote: You can go to Server Manager and remove Terminal Services - Terminal Server from the machine, and re-install it again with the default settings. Unless you don't want to use other custom settings,

Bug#466885: runit: no way to maintain non-default permissions on ...
macca ma...@discussions.microsoft.com microsoft public windows vista administration_accounts_passwords Hi BirgerH I now have permission for the key. I have not tried uninstalling Kaspersky yet. Thank you very much for your time and effort. Regards Macca "BirgerH" wrote: Hi. Go to the item, you want to take over the

Share and NTSF permissions...
I really payed little of no attention to the "Apply onto:" field when checking the permissions. I do undestand now. (but I still think the GUI could be setup better so that it shows the permissions in an easier to understand format) Thanks a million, you have been very helpful. I will try to keep things really

Question on Special Permissions
Pavel Emelyanov xe...@openvz.org linux kernel When reading from/writing to some table, a root, which this table came from, may affect this table's permissions, depending on who is working with the table. The core hunk is at the bottom of this patch. All the rest is just pushing the ctl_table_root argument up to the

NTFS Permissions
Gary L. Chefetz [MVP] g...@chefetz.org microsoft public project server Dots: The relationship-based permissions are determined through "categories." Out of the box, PMs can open and save their own projects and not others. You need to change category permissions to alter this and you must have well-constructed RBS

Setting permissions in User Security tab is reverting back to ...
Sounds like directory permissions. The permissions such as 644 are in three clusters of 3 bits each (octal), with the first cluster controlling access for the owner, the second controlling access for those belonging to the same unix group, and the third controlling access for everyone else.

permissions
Jerold Schulman Je...@jsiinc.com microsoft public win2000 active_directory On Tue, 4 May 2004 07:24:19 -0700, "Curt" <anonym...@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote: Windows 2000 Server - SP4 I setup a Users directory with the default permissions of Everyone-Full for the share and file permissions.

Shared folder permissions
Kent W. England [MVP] k...@mvps.org microsoft public security Generally speaking, it works best when you create specific file system permissions per account or group and then use network share permissions that are somewhat broader. For example, you can share a folder with Everyone, but use the file permissions to

What is "Full Control" permissions?
andy geek_s...@dsl.pipex.com linux debian user Raj Kiran Grandhi wrote: andy wrote: Hello I am attempting to change the ownership of and permissions for the contents of a USB Seagate Free Agent drive. At present, root has ownership, although everybody and their dog can rwx files: $ ls -l /media/FreeAgent\ Drive/

permissions
Currently I am trying to create some Solaris installations packages and to do so I need the know the current file permissions for "/etc/env". I thought "ls -l -d -? /etc/env'" with '-?' being an option I don't know yet and which will change the display format from "drwxrwxrwt" to octal. Now I read "ls --help",

Printer permissions / security
Silvan sil...@windows-sucks.com alt os linux mandrake Gavin Potter wrote: You need to add umask=0 (or some other umask) to /etc/fstab in order to simulate permissions for the volume and allow your user to have access. I explained this in some detail in another post, which I have pasted here for your convenience:

Problem with Permissions
And, I dont usually topost, but I just want to thank Tom for the very helpful info - Cathy In article <180920030753172058%ign...@invalid.com>, Mark Conrad <ign...@invalid.com> wrote: Anyhow, onwards and upwards trying to untangle the non-sensensical Permissions mess that Apple has dumped me into.

SELECT permissions ...
Besides Add & read are given independently from two different groups in the ntfs permissions.Or is read coming from the share permissions?That would make it most restrictive.I just dont understand how read gets in there. Didn't get any responses before, eh? Here goes... When figuring out effective NTFS permissions,

List Permissions
Andy Matt Coarr <mco...@mitre.org> wrote: I am trying to write a procedure that will set default permissions for four different groups in my databases. However, manipulating the permissions property of the Container and Document objects does not appear to have the desired effect. Basically I am trying to reproduce

permissions
I changed the AdminSDHolder object to inherit permissions and that seemed to work. Thanks! George Saral6978 wrote: George, The permissions are changing because of the AdminSDHolder object. Is this user by chance a part of following: Domain Administrators Enterprise Administrators Schema Administrators

permissions help - create 'private' folder
Pegasus \(MVP\) I....@fly.com microsoft public windows file_system I suspect that you're sharing your folder twice: Once with restricted permissions, once with full permissions. Depending on which share you use, you have restricted access or full access. This would not be an OS vulnerability but a trap of your own