F5F Stay Refreshed Hardware Desktop You gained access to your C drive after securing it.

You gained access to your C drive after securing it.

You gained access to your C drive after securing it.

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StellanDaMelon
Junior Member
15
09-22-2023, 11:49 PM
#1
To prevent your kids from installing programs on the boot drive, you’ve already adjusted permissions and moved folders to the D drive. Now you’re losing admin access to the C drive. You might need to reset permissions or use a different method to regain control.
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StellanDaMelon
09-22-2023, 11:49 PM #1

To prevent your kids from installing programs on the boot drive, you’ve already adjusted permissions and moved folders to the D drive. Now you’re losing admin access to the C drive. You might need to reset permissions or use a different method to regain control.

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_DinarPvP_
Junior Member
12
09-24-2023, 01:01 PM
#2
Tried this
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_DinarPvP_
09-24-2023, 01:01 PM #2

Tried this

M
mccoop03
Posting Freak
910
09-24-2023, 01:53 PM
#3
The attempt failed.
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mccoop03
09-24-2023, 01:53 PM #3

The attempt failed.

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FlameSquid32
Senior Member
501
10-09-2023, 06:35 PM
#4
Do you have backups ready for restoration? Usually it’s better to restrict admin access instead of giving them permission to reinstall anything, or apply limits so they can’t run files in downloads and other controlled items. That approach isn’t recommended for managing permissions. Have you adjusted the permissions on C:\ at all?
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FlameSquid32
10-09-2023, 06:35 PM #4

Do you have backups ready for restoration? Usually it’s better to restrict admin access instead of giving them permission to reinstall anything, or apply limits so they can’t run files in downloads and other controlled items. That approach isn’t recommended for managing permissions. Have you adjusted the permissions on C:\ at all?

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Ninjas_R_OP
Senior Member
743
10-11-2023, 04:13 AM
#5
Click the right arrow on c>properties>security>edit>add this user to restore your access.
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Ninjas_R_OP
10-11-2023, 04:13 AM #5

Click the right arrow on c>properties>security>edit>add this user to restore your access.

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xWaseem09
Member
161
10-13-2023, 03:56 AM
#6
If Van Is Livid’s suggestion fails... Turn on the administrator account for complete authority and restore your user settings. Open cmd as an administrator and execute net user administrator /active:yes. Log out entirely from your current session and choose the newly created Adminstrator account. Follow Van’s instructions. If successful, log out of the admin account completely and sign in to your account again. Launch cmd once more and input net user administrator /active:no to deactivate the admin role.
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xWaseem09
10-13-2023, 03:56 AM #6

If Van Is Livid’s suggestion fails... Turn on the administrator account for complete authority and restore your user settings. Open cmd as an administrator and execute net user administrator /active:yes. Log out entirely from your current session and choose the newly created Adminstrator account. Follow Van’s instructions. If successful, log out of the admin account completely and sign in to your account again. Launch cmd once more and input net user administrator /active:no to deactivate the admin role.

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zMisterio
Junior Member
38
10-14-2023, 01:07 AM
#7
It seems like you're pointing out a necessary step. You'd need admin access to proceed.
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zMisterio
10-14-2023, 01:07 AM #7

It seems like you're pointing out a necessary step. You'd need admin access to proceed.

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ZzZ_PwNeD_ZzZ
Member
74
10-17-2023, 04:33 PM
#8
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ZzZ_PwNeD_ZzZ
10-17-2023, 04:33 PM #8

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Athame_
Senior Member
734
10-17-2023, 05:00 PM
#9
Remember to include what you need next.
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Athame_
10-17-2023, 05:00 PM #9

Remember to include what you need next.

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FladaHD
Member
222
10-20-2023, 06:21 PM
#10
With Windows 11, the standard local "Administrator" account is turned off by default. But the first account you set up (or one you add from an online Microsoft account) will automatically join the Administrators group. Just verify this quickly by clicking the Start button, selecting the Control Panel, then System Tools, and finally Local Users and Groups.
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FladaHD
10-20-2023, 06:21 PM #10

With Windows 11, the standard local "Administrator" account is turned off by default. But the first account you set up (or one you add from an online Microsoft account) will automatically join the Administrators group. Just verify this quickly by clicking the Start button, selecting the Control Panel, then System Tools, and finally Local Users and Groups.

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