I cannot access downloads, files






















First, locate the Files app on your iPhone or iPad. The quickest way to do this is with Spotlight Search. Once you locate the file you want, you can tap it to preview it, or tap and hold it to open a pop-up menu. Then, you can move, copy, or rename the file, along with other operations. Do I need one?

Customize the Taskbar in Windows What Is svchost. Browse All Buying Guides. Best iPhone 13 Pro Case. Best Bluetooth Headphones for Switch.

Best Roku TV. Best Apple Watch. Best iPad Cases. Best Portable Monitors. Thanks to "no spamming" for posting the correct answer. This is not a UAC problem. All interactive access receives the access associated with the Everyone group pretty sure that is still correct through at least Win7 and Win I believe that Microsoft shot themselves in the foot on this one.

Here is an excerpt the post from nospamming thanks again :. You will now have access to your desired Folder s. If the Profile you are using is not the Object's Owner you will be prompted to make your Administrative access Permanent. To avoid such permanency you have 2 choices: 1 Log on as the Object's Owner in order to edit the Permissions; 2 Enable, use, then disable, the default Administrator account - but that's another "can of worms" to be opened.

I cannot access my own Documents and Settings, nor my own Pictures, nor my own anything else. Let the owner configure the access not you.

Makes Windows 7 well nigh unusable. So am forced to go to Linux for future compatibility. Look: MS could make money by developing a separate program to sell which sets and removes permissions and other security features. So instead of looking like the villain, MS could design the RIGHT defaults, like far better font sizes which don't increase dialogue box size, and NO permissions restrictions -- so more people won't want to rollback their Office or OS -- and then sell separately, all this security stuff.

What seems strange to me is that everyone is trying to circumvent a perfectly good security practice don't run as administrator. That's fine if you logged on as an administrator but all administrators are treated as standard users unless they elevate whatever process they are working on. For example: You want to save a text document to the system32 directory but Windows won't let you.

Now you should be able to save it wherever you want. Same goes for cmd and powershell. They must be elevated or they can not touch protected directories. If you still can't access folders I would be looking at NTFS permissions in that fantastically detailed post someone else did in this thread.

Taking ownership is a workaround. The problem is a huge bug, mistake and mass hallucinated misconception by MS. My take on it is that due to security regs and best practices, MS finally decided that "the" Administrator as the sole and default user really was ill advised like people had been saying for a couple decades.

So they set out to respect the Administrators group and expect each administrator to have an individual account. However, and this is where they jumped the rails completely, since most of the planet had systems with only the "Administrator" they decided in a moment of total lapse, or let some completely non-trained hack in a position that should have been a computer scientist decide, that they could not actually trust the fact that an account was an Administrator when determining whether to permit administration by Administrators.

They probably had also hired some people who previously worked in government regulation or police departments or for the TSA. I believe I've understood other threads to say part of the problem is just a flat out bug in Windows Explorer which MS either can't understand or won't bother to fix. The rest of it is a huge cognitive dissonance throughout the organization that all solutions must be intricately hard, and every detail must be manually specified by a nerdly, myopic, and mind-numbed techie.

This stuff is all in Win R2 as well, which is where I am struggling with it. I am required to build a PCI-compliant environment. I'm pretty sure it is impossible using Windows. I'm having these issues too. But I know what caused them to occur, I've been hacked by someone I also know who but can do nothing about it. Very frustrating. I hope it can get fixed some time, it really aught to be something that one should be able to take care off.

But pewople can walk right in and take ownership and inheritance and so on, just like that. Only way to avoid this kind of thing is to stay offf line permanently. What an option, huh. I am currently having an issue where I right click on a PDF folder on my desktop and it will not move to the destination that I wish it to move to.

It comes up that it is "Access Denied" and I will require administrator rights to move it. Then the security tab - It says that I require administrator rights. I have tried just about every combination to gain access to the file to no avail. I had an issue on our server that was along the same thing. When I went out to the ownership section, there was no owner listed. Come to find out that they created many of these folders and files from a MAC system on a Windows Server member server.

Don't know if its a bug or some other type of issue but none of the folder or files the ones with issues had an owner. Once I made the domain admin the owner of the folders, I reset the permissions and got it all back to normal.

This was the only way I could solve the issue. I know that the user used both a company issued Dell and a MAC that he owns. It may just be a weird Windows Server bug. I have thesame problem Office Office Exchange Server.

Not an IT pro? Windows Client. Sign in. United States English. Ask a question. Quick access. Search related threads. Remove From My Forums. Answered by:. Archived Forums. Windows 7 Security. Sign in to vote. Why are administrator rights not effective? How do I as Administrator give myself access rights?

If not available how do I return to XP and retrieve the cost of Windows 7? Wednesday, November 18, AM. This thread is dangerous and a load of Ballony.

Go here and find the answer in seconds! Tuesday, November 23, PM. What are you trying to achieve, which folders and files are you referring to? By default User Account Control prevent certain actions even though you actually have an administrator account. Wednesday, November 18, PM. Does it work? Hope it helps. Proposed as answer by wajahat Tuesday, November 26, AM. Thursday, November 19, AM. Hey Robinson,. Better approach than Andreas, but seriously Take Stumbl5r at what he posted.

You would think that you could provide a straight answer to what was asked. Does MS purposefully make things complicated and expect you all to follow suit and complicate things even more.

Seriously "Does the computer has another OS? Pull the slider all the way to the bottom Go collect another little badge under your name to show how a power user can complicate a simple question more. Friday, November 20, AM. To be able to be help out we must narrow down the problem and therefore we need to gather as much information about the problem as pssible, which results in questions back at you. We could of course talk in general terms but that does not help anyone I suppose.

When UAC ias activate even though you are using an user account which is a part of the administrators group it is by default running with standard user priviliges. When you want to for instance install an application you will be asked to approve it, whereafter the installation process alone gets the higher priviliges.

The same thing applies to certain files and folders and you might see these "approve" dialogue boxes from time to time when working with files. UAC is there a security boundary and you can turn it off if by searching for "Change User Account Control settings" in the startmenu.

The other jibberish about needing more info Proposed as answer by C. Friday, November 20, PM. Like many, I opted to avoid an upgrade to Vista and have left XP on my home desktop. My wife recently purchased a laptop with Windows 7 Home pre-installed so there's no "other OS" to deal with. Having Windows experience dating before 3. After finding out how to '"activate" the Administrator account, it seems that MS doesn't trust that user account to do something that simple.

So, if I wish to do such things to my computer, how do I go about doing that? Wednesday, December 2, AM. Good call Dapperman. However, when I put the slider all the way down in UAC and restarted my system, I still could not access certain files and folders in Windows Explorer even if I have administrator access.

I am doing Win 7 Home Premium bit btw. This is irritating me to no end, that I cannot access files and folders in my own computer - including the folder 'Application Data', 'Local Settings', 'PrintHood' and so forth. Does anyone have a workaround, please? Thursday, December 3, AM. I found the extremely labor intensive workaround. For every folder misbehaving that way including 'SendTo', 'Startup' and so forth , one needs to right-click on the folder, and go into its properties.

In the security tab, the advanced option enables the user to claim ownership of all those folders, whose default owner is SYSTEM. Once the user claims ownership, then the contents can be seen. However, this needs to be done individually on each folder. How to Take Ownership in Windows and access locked files and folders 1.

Locate the file or folder on which you want to take ownership in windows explorer 2. Click on Security tab 4. Click on Edit Button and select user from given Change Owner to list if user or group is not in given list then click on other users or groups. Click ok when Windows Security Prompt is displayed If none of the methods could help you to fix the Download folder not responding issue in Windows 10, but some important files are saved to that folder, what should you do?

Just recover files from the inaccessible folder with the professional data recovery software — MiniTool Power Data Recovery. Step 1: Launch this program to its main interface.

Choose the C drive and click Scan. Step 3: Find the Downloads folder, open it and see whether this software has scanned your needed files. If yes, check all the items and click Save to a safe location. What should you do in the event of Downloads folder not responding? If you have to temporarily disable your antivirus software, you should re-enable it as soon as you are done.

Important: Disabling your antivirus software or changing the settings may make your PC vulnerable to viral, fraudulent, or malicious attacks. Microsoft does not recommend that you disable your antivirus software or change the settings. Use this workaround at your own risk. To temporarily disable your antivirus software, see Disable antivirus software. The file is on a location that is not currently accessible like a network location or an external drive that is not currently connected to the PC.

For more information about errors accessing files or folders in Windows, see "Access Denied" or other errors when accessing or working with files and folders in Windows. Need more help? Expand your skills.

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