![]() ![]() Next try to open the folder directly in Windows Explorer (rather than the UNC share) and get this message:.RDP into SERVER1 as COMPANY\newadmin and try to open the same folder using the same path that previously worked as COMPANY\administrator and receive this error:. ![]() This account is assigned to the Domain Admins group and thus should have permissions identical to that of COMPANY\administrator COMPANY\administrator account is then permanently disabled and a replacement account called COMPANY\newadmin is created.COMPANY\administrator is a member of Domain Admins which in turn is a member of the local administrators group on all servers.Use COMPANY\administrator account to perform NTFS file share permission changes by first RDPing directly into SERVER1, opening the folder in question using its UNC path and modify the NTFS permissions.I do now though and wanted to share my learnings for the benefit of others. I’ve run into this problem before but admittedly never fully understood why. They would receive a “You do not have permission to access” error when trying to open folders in Windows Explorer when they were confirmed to have full permissions to those folders. I recently had a customer express frustration they could no longer manage file permissions on their Windows Server with a newly created domain admin account.
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