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From: Stan Hilliard on 1 Apr 2010 01:43 I am helping a friend to free up some space on a hard drive and found HPselect (5G) in C:\Program Files\. The filenames are suggestive of games. I plan to uninstall it, but I noticed something unusual. The characters of the path name and the characters of the filenames stand out from other paths and files in Windows Explorer. They look lit up and bright green instead of black. What does this indicate? Is this any reason to not uninstall it? Stan Hilliard
From: Terry R. on 1 Apr 2010 01:45 On 3/31/2010 10:43 PM On a whim, Stan Hilliard pounded out on the keyboard > I am helping a friend to free up some space on a hard drive and found > HPselect (5G) in C:\Program Files\. The filenames are suggestive of > games. I plan to uninstall it, but I noticed something unusual. The > characters of the path name and the characters of the filenames stand > out from other paths and files in Windows Explorer. They look lit up > and bright green instead of black. > > What does this indicate? Is this any reason to not uninstall it? > > Stan Hilliard > Hi Stan, That shows the files are encrypted: http://support.microsoft.com/kb/308993 If you don't want the games, there's no reason not to uninstall them. Terry R. -- Anti-spam measures are included in my email address. Delete NOSPAM from the email address after clicking Reply.
From: Twayne on 1 Apr 2010 13:58 In news:omb8r5psi1js2em47s3nbb10emoks36tg9(a)4ax.com, Stan Hilliard <usenetreplyMS(a)samplingplansNOTSPAM.com> typed: > I am helping a friend to free up some space on a hard drive > and found HPselect (5G) in C:\Program Files\. The filenames > are suggestive of games. I plan to uninstall it, but I > noticed something unusual. The characters of the path name > and the characters of the filenames stand out from other > paths and files in Windows Explorer. They look lit up and > bright green instead of black. > > What does this indicate? Is this any reason to not > uninstall it? > > Stan Hilliard No, the green would not be a reason to not delete them, but .... it'll depend on whether yours is the account that encrypted them or not. I don't think you need to unencrypt them, but as with any other account, if you didn't create them, you may not be able to delete them unless you "take ownership" of the files. For sure, the only account that would be capable of reading those files would be the one that created them. MS encryption is pretty hard to crack. Likewise, should you find blue file names, those will be compressed files. HTH, Twayne`
From: sanjacstudent14 on 18 Apr 2010 00:36
"Stan Hilliard" wrote: > I am helping a friend to free up some space on a hard drive and found > HPselect (5G) in C:\Program Files\. The filenames are suggestive of > games. I plan to uninstall it, but I noticed something unusual. The > characters of the path name and the characters of the filenames stand > out from other paths and files in Windows Explorer. They look lit up > and bright green instead of black. > > What does this indicate? Is this any reason to not uninstall it? > > Stan Hilliard > > . > Once a file or folder has been encrypted, it will appear in green. If you decide you no longer want a file or folder to be encrypted, right-click it, select Properties, click the Advanced button, uncheck the box labeled Encrypt Contents To Secure Data, and then click OK. Typically, only the person who originally encrypted data can decrypt. |