![]() Or you might have a hard drive from another computer that you need to control files on. It might be a system file you need to alter to apply some hack-like replacing Notepad with another text editor-in which case, a built-in user account named Trusted Installer has the ownership by default. Sometimes, you might run into a situation where you need to take over the ownership of a file or folder. ![]() That user is also always allowed to access the file or folder-even when other permissions seemingly contradict that access. In Windows, a user that has ownership of a file or folder has implicit rights to change permissions on that object. You can also just download our one-step Registry hacks to make those changes for you. You can add a “Take Ownership” command to your context menu by editing the Registry manually in two locations-one for files and the second for folders.
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