I'm looking for a way to avoid spending the next year taking ownership of thousands of files one at a time... for some reason, Windows can't change them in bulk. I am in desperate need of your expert mojo help! Here's the story:
I upgraded from Windows XP to Windows 7 by buying a new hard drive and installing Windows 7 on it. I took my old C drive and mounted it as the D drive, which I named "OldSea."
I ran short of disk space, so I went purchased two 2TB disks, one for live use and one as an offline backup mirror. I installed one 2TB disk, call it NewDisk. I wanted to copy everything from OldSea to NewDisk. I tried just dragging all of the top-level folders over, but explorer would not let me copy most of the folders. I tried right-clicking on the drive, going to security tab, clicking advanced, and adding myself as a permission entry with full control, and then trying to propagate those settings to everything underneath. But, somehow Windows 7 has got it in its head that not only do I not own lots of things on OldSea, but I'm not allowed to propagate new ownership or access permissions through inheritance. I get "access denied" errors for dozens of folders until I got tired of clicking continue and just gave up. I can take ownership of individual folder or files and then give myself "full control" permissions on them, one at a time, but there are thousands of folders and hundreds of thousands of files!
Even RoboCopy in regular user mode would stop copying when it hit one of these folders/files, stating "access denied."
I managed to move all the files to NewDisk by starting a command line as administrator and using robocopy with the /B switch. Now I have a second copy of my data that I do not own and cannot manipulate en masse, and as I get ready to copy NewDisk to its offline backup mirror, I find myself in the same situation.
I can't describe how frustrating it is to not be able to control your own data on your own computer. Can someone please tell me how I can take back my data and get the access rights I deserve without spending the rest of my natural life changing permissions one file at a time?
Thank you!
Best,
Mike
I upgraded from Windows XP to Windows 7 by buying a new hard drive and installing Windows 7 on it. I took my old C drive and mounted it as the D drive, which I named "OldSea."
I ran short of disk space, so I went purchased two 2TB disks, one for live use and one as an offline backup mirror. I installed one 2TB disk, call it NewDisk. I wanted to copy everything from OldSea to NewDisk. I tried just dragging all of the top-level folders over, but explorer would not let me copy most of the folders. I tried right-clicking on the drive, going to security tab, clicking advanced, and adding myself as a permission entry with full control, and then trying to propagate those settings to everything underneath. But, somehow Windows 7 has got it in its head that not only do I not own lots of things on OldSea, but I'm not allowed to propagate new ownership or access permissions through inheritance. I get "access denied" errors for dozens of folders until I got tired of clicking continue and just gave up. I can take ownership of individual folder or files and then give myself "full control" permissions on them, one at a time, but there are thousands of folders and hundreds of thousands of files!
Even RoboCopy in regular user mode would stop copying when it hit one of these folders/files, stating "access denied."
I managed to move all the files to NewDisk by starting a command line as administrator and using robocopy with the /B switch. Now I have a second copy of my data that I do not own and cannot manipulate en masse, and as I get ready to copy NewDisk to its offline backup mirror, I find myself in the same situation.
I can't describe how frustrating it is to not be able to control your own data on your own computer. Can someone please tell me how I can take back my data and get the access rights I deserve without spending the rest of my natural life changing permissions one file at a time?
Thank you!
Best,
Mike