I have removed such files using Ubuntu, downloaded as an ISO and installed
on a bootable thumb drive, using Unetbootin. Such a little item is very
handy and with a decent Thumb drive, is quite impressive.
FWIW, MSE found and removed a trojan installed along with Unlocker on one of
my machines. Moreover Unlocker does not always work, and when it does, I
wonder if it is safe..
"Petrarch" <> wrote in message
news:2430785A-B14B-4C75-A57E-...
>I restored my vista OS using a system image utility provided by Alienware.
> It created a backup folder on the c drive with all the old files in it,
> including user profiles. I changed the owner of all files and folders
> back
> to my account and tried to delete it, but got the UAC messages that I need
> to
> allow administrator rights to do so. After clicking yes, I got a message
> that permission was denied with the only options of "Try Again" or
> "Cancel".
> After making visible all hidden files and folders, I was able to drill
> down
> to the one file I could not delete. I've used the "take ownership" steps
> in
> Vista explorer properties, and also the "takeown" dos commands, which
> report
> success that the Administrators group or my account which belongs to the
> administrators group, is the owner of the file, and that I have full
> control
> of it. Even so, I cannot delete this file. In DOS, I get access denied.
> In
> Explorer, I get the "you need permission to perform this action" message,
> with "try again" or "cancel", and it shows that my account (or
> administrators
> group, doing it that way) is the owner. It's just this one file. I was
> able
> to delete all other files and folders around this file, but just not this
> one.
>
> I wonder if the folder path is so long or so nested that UAC fails to
> figure
> it out? It was in users\<my profile>\appdata\roaming\etc. Or is the file
> corrupt? The file is a tempory file created by one of those biometric
> devices when logged on with your fingerprint, and is supposed to disappear
> when you log off, but it seems to have remained there because of a hard
> boot.
> Is there a utility I can use that can nuke this one lone file?
>
> thanks
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