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| My PC blew up, I now have a new PC with Vista installed. On my HDD, certain files are encrypted and I can't move them onto my new PC - I have tried everything that I can think of but the new PC does not recognise me as the 'owner' of the folders so will not let me move them! I can move all non-encrypted files though - help!!! | Guest
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| | #2 (permalink) | |
| "Familydavis" <Familydavis@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in message news 2D45495-C3A8-4426-A80E-4ADDAB3DAAAC@microsoft.com...Quote:
The encryption wouldn't do much good if you could get the data, would it? When you encrypted the original files, did you make an emergency recovery disk with your key? If the encryption is any good, without that key, you will never get your files back. | Guest
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| | #3 (permalink) | |
| You have to take ownership of those files -- Peter Please Reply to Newsgroup for the benefit of others Requests for assistance by email can not and will not be acknowledged. "Familydavis" <Familydavis@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in message news 2D45495-C3A8-4426-A80E-4ADDAB3DAAAC@microsoft.com...Quote:
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| | #4 (permalink) | |
| I cannot take ownership of the files, Vista says that access is denied. I've tried opening the files in the hope that I could save as something else but access is denied. "Familydavis" wrote: Quote:
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| | #5 (permalink) | ||
| Familydavis wrote: Quote:
take ownership: 1. Right-click the file or folder, and then click Properties. 2. Click the Security tab. 3. Under Group or user names, click your name to see the permissions you have. To open a file, you need to have read permission. For more information on permissions, see What are permissions? http://tinyurl.com/2j9vgr To take ownership of a folder: 1. Right-click the folder that you want to take ownership of, and then click Properties. 2. Click the Security tab, click Advanced, and then click the Owner tab. 3. Click Edit. Administrator permission required If you are prompted for an administrator password or confirmation, type the password or provide confirmation. 4. Click the name of the person you want to give ownership to. 5. If you want that person to be the owner of files and subfolders in this folder, select the Replace owner on subcontainers and objects check box. 6. Click OK Malke -- Elephant Boy Computers www.elephantboycomputers.com "Don't Panic!" MS-MVP Windows - Shell/User | Guest
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| | #6 (permalink) | |||
| Thanks for the advice, tried it all but no luck! Have now lost Video's of my kids, all of my music and all of My Documents. I even tried plugging my HDD into another machine and tried to boot that but it wouldn't even go into safe mode. "Malke" wrote: Quote:
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| | #7 (permalink) | |||
| Familydavis, give us some more information to work with. It appears that if you want to be able to recover those files you will have to get your old PC running. You said it "blew up". Exactly what happened with it? Also, what OS was in use on your old PC? What program or method was used for the encryption? In regards to the hard drive containing these files, was it the same drive as your operating system or was it a separate drive? Hobo Familydavis wrote: Quote:
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| | #8 (permalink) | |||
| What you need to do in that case is to plug your trouble Hard Drive as a Slave into another computer. Plugging it in as a slave in addition to the installed Hard Drive , you should be able to get to your files. -- Peter Please Reply to Newsgroup for the benefit of others Requests for assistance by email can not and will not be acknowledged. "Familydavis" <Familydavis@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in message news:B126FB71-B27B-4E8B-AD0D-49EC03788EA9@microsoft.com... Quote:
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| | #9 (permalink) | |
| On Sun, 19 Aug 2007 23:17:46 -0400, Peter Foldes wrote: Quote:
referring to encrypted files. If these files were encrypted with EFS and the original encryption keys are lost with no archive or backup of the keys and no data recovery agent then the files are gone. None of the advice in this thread about taking ownership or moving the drive to another system are going to be of any help at all. | Guest
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| | #10 (permalink) | ||
| No I did not miss that. All I told the OP is that to get those files to show on his HD after he messed up with putting that HD into another computer as the main is to install it as a slave so he can access those encrypted files again on his HD. -- Peter Please Reply to Newsgroup for the benefit of others Requests for assistance by email can not and will not be acknowledged. "Paul Adare" <pkadare@gmail.com> wrote in message news:1w9c5cmhbj5nz.1ks9t6fud6n4e.dlg@40tude.net... Quote:
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