In this edition of Security Solutions, Mike Mullins takes a closer look. When it comes to the old NTFS (from Windows NT) and the current NTFS (from Windows 2000, Windows Server 2003, and Windows XP), there are a lot of similarities and a few differences. NTFS permissions offer a great deal of control when it comes to resources on your systems. You can build your filter based on a huge number of attributes, including: the account name, account type, which domain the account is from, whether or not the permissions is inherited, whether or not the account is currently disabled, the account SID, whether or not a group has no members, and much more.Windows 101: Know the basics about NTFS permissions The filtering options allow you to quickly find rogue permissions that do not conform to your company standards or to easily detect directories that have permissions assigned for accounts that no longer exist, and let you exclude permissions that you are not interested in (for example you could exclude all inherited permissions or exclude directories where permissions are the same as the parent directory). It lets you quickly see which groups and users have access to which directories and allows you to export this information to file for further reviewing.įeatures such as the highly customisable filtering system and the ability to display group members (direct and nested) directly in the report, combined with the choice of a tree or table based result view format and the option to highlight different permissions in different colours, make this one of the most powerful and easy to use permissions reporting tools available. NTFS Permissions Reporter is a modern user friendly tool for reporting on directory permissions on your Windows file servers.
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