The opinionated ramblings and muses of a weary web victim.
...a how to.
Published on October 28, 2009 By Jafo In Personal Computing

Skinners like to mess with defaults....we screw up our systems quite well doing it, too.

This one had me stumped.  I just could not get 'control' of the included folders in windows/web/wallpaper/  no matter what I poked and prodded.

The solution is a reg 'hack' to merge...and you can regain ownership of what are otherwise locked folders/images/etc.

http://www.herbystweaks.net/files/TakeOwn.zip 

The only warning is that you are merging and thus altering registry entries...so if you are nervous about that....simply do not do it.

Included within the zip is a reversal option to restore your system to 'normal'.

Read the included text doc for details...


Comments (Page 1)
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on Oct 28, 2009

it's actually quite painless, even an idiot like me could do it. for those that don't know, the location of the files is C:\Windows\Web\Wallpaper

on Oct 28, 2009

Yeah, I didn't reg hack anything.  Seems like you made something easy into something hard.

on Oct 28, 2009

Seems like you made something easy into something hard.

"You need permission from TrustedInstaller to make changes to this folder."

"Try Again"

 

No modding of permissions appeared to be able to access them for deletion.

 

on Oct 28, 2009

You could delete anything you want in safe mode.

on Oct 28, 2009

Okay, but please excuse me for asking.  Why would you want to get rid the Windows 7 included wallpapgers?

on Oct 28, 2009

eetmorsqrls
it's actually quite painless, even an idiot like me could do it. for those that don't know, the location of the files is C:\Windows\Web\Wallpaper

Sorry Jafo But I tried and I can access the files, architecture, characters, all of them

I don't understand why you cannot. Stupid question? Did yo log on as admin?

on Oct 28, 2009

I forgot to mention that I am running an upgrade of Win 7 HP from Vista HP and not the full install.

on Oct 28, 2009

no problems here , and did, useless low quality images.

on Oct 28, 2009

Actually, you do not need to do any of this. Follow these instructions.

Browse to c:\windows\windows\web\wallpaper

Right click on wallpaper and click properties. Select the Security tab and then click the Advanced button.

Click the owner tab. Current owner is probably listed as System. Change Owner to field should have your currently logged on user listed. This account must have local admin rights to the system to make the next changes.

Click the Edit button. Now click your currently logged on user account under the Change owner to field. Check the box of Replace owner on subcontainers and objects. Now click Ok and confirm you want to do this. Once you have taken Ownership of the folder and subfolders then continue below.

Go back to the wallpaper properties and select the Security tab. Click the Edit button and add your currently logged on user account to this list. Give yourself Full Control permissions and click Ok. Now click the Advanced button and then the Change permissions button. Check the box Replace all child object permissions with inheritable permissions from this object. Click Ok and confirm this. Now all the folders and files under the Wallpaper folder should be under your control and you should have Full access permissions to them. Now choose what you want to delete.

Yes, this is alot of steps, but it is the correct way of doing this. And there is no need to "hack" anything.

I hope this helps!

 

on Oct 28, 2009

Okay, but please excuse me for asking. Why would you want to get rid the Windows 7 included wallpapgers?

 

They aren't every good.

on Oct 28, 2009

They aren't every good.

Yeah, and they aren't very good, either.

on Oct 28, 2009

Geesh... I'm glad John's skinning is better than his grammar...

on Oct 28, 2009

Actually, you do not need to do any of this. Follow these instructions.

Browse to c:\windows\windows\web\wallpaper

Right click on wallpaper and click properties. Select the Security tab and then click the Advanced button.

Click the owner tab. Current owner is probably listed as System. Change Owner to field should have your currently logged on user listed. This account must have local admin rights to the system to make the next changes.

Click the Edit button. Now click your currently logged on user account under the Change owner to field. Check the box of Replace owner on subcontainers and objects. Now click Ok and confirm you want to do this. Once you have taken Ownership of the folder and subfolders then continue below.

Go back to the wallpaper properties and select the Security tab. Click the Edit button and add your currently logged on user account to this list. Give yourself Full Control permissions and click Ok. Now click the Advanced button and then the Change permissions button. Check the box Replace all child object permissions with inheritable permissions from this object. Click Ok and confirm this. Now all the folders and files under the Wallpaper folder should be under your control and you should have Full access permissions to them. Now choose what you want to delete.

Yes, this is alot of steps, but it is the correct way of doing this. And there is no need to "hack" anything.

I hope this helps!

Ah...you see...I tried all of that originally...and at one time or another I'd encounter Catch22.

The 'hack' is a simple registry merge that is actually a lot easier....and gives you a context menu item accessible by right-click that you can then use on any file or folder you wish.

....and yes, I was logged in as Admin....

on Oct 28, 2009

They aren't every good.

Zubaz is contagious

on Oct 28, 2009

Geesh... I'm glad John's skinning is better than his grammar...

 

You should try my cooking

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