Windows controls how users access files and folders through a detailed and
complex system of permissions. In fact, Windows has one of the most granular
object-access control mechanisms of any popular OS. Files and folders have at
least 14 NTFS permissions that can be allowed or denied—and audited. You
can set these permissions on a per file or folder and per user or group basis.
You can also set permission inheritance on a per file or folder and per user
or group basis. It's easy to get bogged down in a quagmire of permissions complexity.
Here's a quick guide to how Windows file and folder permissions work and how
to use them more effectively.
Object Access Basics
A user never directly "touches" any Windows object. All object access is done
through programs (e.g., Windows Explorer, Microsoft Office) or processes. A
program accessing a local resource on behalf of the user is called impersonation
. A program accessing a remote resource is called delegation. . . .


ajb120850 January 08, 2008 (Article Rating: