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"don't have permission to see its contents"

Greetings,

I'm really having problems with this Snow Leopard, and don't want to be agitated, or frustrated, but it's getting harder and harder to do so.

After installing on my 17" Macbook Pro, I was able to log in, fine, but was unable to do much of anything, as I was prompted to give a administrator password, but had no idea of what this was.

After trying every combination of my name (which has been my user name from before time), and pass work, I got it in my head that "this messing ain't cutting it."

After a bit of looking here on the forum, I was able to find out how to use my install disc to crate a "system administrator" account, and then, after restarting from my hard drive, I was able to go into the system preferences, find my users, and give myself permissions to act as an administrator (after this, I read several posts about how it's scary to crate an administrator account -- and it was -- but just tried to be strong -- channeling bit of strength from an alligator I once saw eat a big chunk of old truck tire, and just pressed on).

Now I should note that while I was log in as the (scary) administrator, I did seem that I was able to open folders without issue, however, when I logged back in as me (the monkey of wire), nothing much had changed, I could not open any folders with exception of "public" and something else like that...

The warning I get is ""don't have premission to see its contents" -- wow, I can't even look?

Frightening.

And, what scares me even more, is that I can go back in my time machine and see things that I would like to bring forward, but when I try to, I'm told "this is part of OS X and can't be modified... " or something close to that... Don't worry about this issue right now, I think it might be tied to the "no permission" deal, but if I've lost those back ups... Well, we all know what that feeling is like, and I will be feeding parts of my grays anatomy to said "Alligator."

So, while I'm here, what about just going back to OSX plain old Leopard?

Can I do this if I do a reset to factory install?

Will that boot out all the snow?

And if so, what I fear is that I have already corrupted my time machine drive with a back up done while this Snow Leopard OS installed... Yeah, when I plugged in the drive to check what it's staturse was, the Macbook just jumped in and performed a new back up -- of this state of affaires.... Scary again.

I was thinking I might be able to go into the drive and erase this one (or perhaps two) backups, but then when I looked there is a document that's very new -- like just at the time this back up was being done -- and it's called something catalog, I think, and I have a gut wrenching feeling that to erase that would be the beginning of a horror show... So, let me not go there just yet...

Wow, that's a lot... Any help on this would just be awesome.

I honestly just rock out hard no my apple products, I'm a long time user, and always do things carefully and with thought, but this is very underwater frozen under the snow black water gator **** for me right this moment in time.

Thank you,
WM

MacBook Pro 17", Mac OS X (10.6), machine is 2.5 years old

Posted on Aug 30, 2009 7:51 PM

Reply
113 replies

Jan 14, 2010 6:59 PM in response to Seth Hodge

I had the same problem. All of my desktop icons, other than my Windows PC and Macintosh HD had disappeared, and I got the message that I did not have permission in my Desktop Folder. Repairing the hard drive using Disk Utility and fixing the permissions did not help. When I control-clicked on the desktop and got information, it showed that I had no rights in the folder, while the group "everyone" could read and write. Upon the instruction of Apple support, I did a clean install of Snow Leopard, and ran the updates, but this still made no difference. After reading the posts here, I decided to open the hard drive, control-click on the desktop folder at the left of the window (under "Places"), and get info. This time my name was not listed, so I unlocked the bottom lock, added my name, and then gave myself read-write privileges. (This sure beats wiping the data and re-installing everything, as I was instructed to do!) Then I clicked on the gear at the bottom of the screen, and choose "apply to enclosed items" After about 15 minutes of repairing/applying changes, all of the desktop icons re-appeared Finally I clicked the "lock" icon at the bottom of the window to help make sure this change doesn't occur again.

Jul 20, 2010 8:44 AM in response to instageek

Dear instageek,

Worked great and thank you immensely for sharing. Saved a trip to the Genius Bar.

NOTE: This worked on my Quad Core Mac Pro. I used this on a secondary hard drive (640gb) that was locked out after changing disc permissions. Once locked out, I had to first 'Fix Permissions' ('Fix Disc' alone did not work—as suggested by Tech Support) of my primary drive by booting up with the System DVD and using 'Disc Utility'. After restarting, instageek's suggestion was the only thing that finally unlocked the hard drive. After the hard drive was unlocked, I then went under 'Get Info' and added my user back to the list.

Aug 7, 2010 6:19 PM in response to bmcaustin

Hi bmcaustin,

Simply try (with success) BatChmod by Renaud Boisjoly
(a frog eater like me),
or FileXaminer by (I don't remember,
it's said on BatChmod site).

These softwares solve ANY privileges and permissions issues,
and even more, but *be careful*.

They both are free, but you should give them $10,
as I did myself, when I solved my Disks Locked problem
(have a look by searching "disks locked" in discussions.apple).

There's absolutely no need to go into Terminal.

I hope having helped you ?

While I'm here, do you know and tell me how to create "Root" account ?

Best regards,

Vialatte
vialatte_94fr@me.com

Aug 7, 2010 6:29 PM in response to Wiremonkey

Hi Wiremonkey,

Simply try (with guaranteed success) BatChmod by Renaud Boisjoly
(a frog eater like me),
or FileXaminer by (I don't remember,
it's said on BatChmod site).

These softwares solve ANY privileges and permissions issues,
and *even more*, but *be careful*.

They both are free, but you should give them $10,
as I did myself, when I solved my *Disks Locked* problem
(have a look by searching "disks locked" in discussions.apple).

If you want something more expensive (is it reassuring ?),
MacPilot (Koingo), *TinkerTool System* (Marcel Brezinc)
and other softwares (I can tell you the names) have dedicated sections
to solve these ennoying authorizations issues.

There's absolutely *no need* to go into Terminal.

I hope having helped you ?

While I'm here, do you know, and tell me, how to create " Root" account ?

Best regards,

Vialatte
vialatte_94fr@me.com

Aug 9, 2010 5:23 AM in response to instageek

THIS WORKED LIKE A CHARM FOR ME!!! THANK YOU SO MUCH! I was very close to reformatting the whole lot when I found this.

I have 4 750GB disks and they all went AWOL with a security lock on each and permissions greyed out, not able to change permissions from Custom, etc....

I've run the commands as per below which fixed it straight away!

Thanks for posting this solution

"don't have permission to see its contents"

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