Accessing password protected files in XP

The Funambulist

New Member
I recently was forced to reinstall windows on my computer, and I have important files i need that were in my documents. but when I try to open my old documents folder, it tells me that access is denied. I know the password to the old account, is there any ways to access these files?
 
I recently was forced to reinstall windows on my computer, and I have important files i need that were in my documents. but when I try to open my old documents folder, it tells me that access is denied. I know the password to the old account, is there any ways to access these files?

so i assume you formatted ? then why are you getting access denied. or are you trying to access your old drive in a new computer ?
because as far as format goes (and you didn't give enough details) it's when you erase the drive completely and lose data
 
Yeah I don't think you fully reformatted. You might have done system recovery or something. Did you back it up and then restore after reinstallation?
 
An antivirus program deleted all of my .sys and .dll files in the WINDOWS folder, so I reinstalled to OS. It left all the other files alone.
 
You most likely made your user folder private, and in doing so encrypted it. Then when you overinstalled you can no longer access your data. This is typical behavior when you make your user folder private.

You will need a third party utility like ERD (which is uber expensive) to boot from and unlock your folder.

Too bad windows doesn't have a powerful enough command line, otherwise you could accomplish this from the CLI.
 
You most likely made your user folder private, and in doing so encrypted it. Then when you overinstalled you can no longer access your data. This is typical behavior when you make your user folder private.

You will need a third party utility like ERD (which is uber expensive) to boot from and unlock your folder.

Too bad windows doesn't have a powerful enough command line, otherwise you could accomplish this from the CLI.

Try booting with a SLAX LiveCD. SLAX has NTFS read/write support, and it can access protected files. I've had to do this on more than one occasion. :rolleyes:
 
Never mind, I got it.
It happens to be that although I couldn't open it, I could change ownership of the folder. So I changed it and it let me in.
 
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