The information in this article applies to:
SYMPTOMS
In Word for Windows, when you open a file owned by someone else, and modify
and save the file, the file inherits your ownership ID.
CAUSEWhen you save the file, Word deletes the original file and renames a temporary edit file that you own, to the original filename, making you the owner of the file. How Word for Windows Changes File Ownership Under Windows NT NTFSWhen you open someone else's file, Word creates a new temporary file that contains a copy of the original and your edits. Windows NT uses the user ID that you logged on with to set the owner ID on the temporary file.When you save the file, Word deletes the original version of the document and renames the temporary file to the original name of the document making you the owner of this file. WORKAROUNDTo work around this problem, save the file to a different filename. This prevents Word from deleting the orginal file. MORE INFORMATION
When you save a file on a Windows NT NTFS partition, the file is assigned
an owner ID. By default, the owner ID is your user ID because you created
the file. By default, other users, even administrators, are denied access
to your files or directories unless you grant them access permissions or
file ownership is transferred.
For additional information, please see the following articles in the Microsoft Knowledge Base: Q89247 Information: How Word for Windows Uses Temporary Files Additional query words: prodnt winword 1.10a 2.00a 2.0a- CD 2.00b 6.00a 6.00c 3.10 ntfs security w4w
Keywords : ntdomain ntsecurity NTSrvWkst |
Last Reviewed: October 27, 1999 © 2000 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved. Terms of Use. |