![]() One instance of corruption, I can just reset Properties > Advanced > Owner > Edit > select correct Owner in Name list, check Replace owner on subcontainers and objects > Apply.īut leave that chore for another 5 minutes and the Owner tab options will be completely corrupted. Once a corrupt permission establishes, the speed of corrupt extension Typically I save any file and get a popup telling me "illegal characters" and then that numeric is owner again. REALLY tired of resetting corruption, sometimes every 5 minutes all day long. Is anyone else getting the same HKU permission corruption, where HKU numeric Keys are taking away SYSTEM and User permissions?Ĭurrent Owner: S-1-5-21-1677977301-2589601805-3516838272-1000 THe situation is relentlessly chaotic.Īfter SecEdit runs, the Security tabs corrupt differently: Auditing > Continue > Add. Remove any found - may have to take ownership first. Properties > Security > Advanced > Permissions > Change Permissions > Add. Not a solution.Īfter running SecEdit, I use Windows Explorer to open Computer, and one-by-one for each disk, confirm permission resets. But SecEdit is simply making it less likely that I have to Audit ownershipīefore taking back ownership of eack disk. ![]() Without this direct disk attachment, the command doesn't do anything. I am running cmd as administrator and travelling to each disk root to paste and run the secedit command string. SecEdit fixes permissions corruption, but only for a few minutes! What triggers corrupt permissions in the system? I am running as Administrator, clearing corrupt permissions that appear for reasons I don't understand inīut in the Owner tab, any corrupt Current owner permission is not touched by SecEdit. Why is this command resetting object permissions, but leaving in place corrupt file ownership?.Where is the best place to run this command?.Do we "run as Administrator", or something more?.This command line string is helping with one Security tab, but leaves serious system threats untouched in other Security tabs. Secedit /configure /cfg %windir%\inf\defltbase.inf /db defltbase.sdb /verbose Microsoft Technet showed a command that helps a bit. IM me - TWiTTer: permissions are ruining my life. secedit /configure /cfg %windir%\inf\defltbase.inf /db defltbase.sdb /verbose Kind Regards Just run in a evalated prompt the following command. Tis article is for windows vista but i works also for windows 7.
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