Nope.
What does this mean? How do I change it if I need to?
I would pick up a book. Or spend time looking up Unix features via Google, as well as Help. Don't have Pogue's "Mac OS X: The Missing Manual" might consider that too.
When you look at Get Info on a boot drive, for it to be bootable, the flag for "Ignore Ownership" has to be off.
If you were to clone a drive with the flag set (Ignore Ownership) it won't boot.
Take a look with BATCHMOD and see what it shows.
http://www.macupdate.com/info.php/id/6440/batchmod
Chmod is a Cocoa utility for manipulating file and folder privileges in Mac OS X (10.5 recommended). It allows the manipulation of ownership as well as the privileges associated to the Owner, Group or others. Here are some of the characteristics of BatChmod:
It's simple and elegant
It allows one to change any specific privilege or ownership without affecting the others (ie, changing the group without affecting the owner, or adding or removing a specific privilege without affecting all the others)
Also, from homepage:
BatChmod is a utility for manipulating file and folder privileges in Mac OS X.
It allows the manipulation of
ownership as well as the
privileges associated to the Owner, Group or others. It can also unlock files in order to apply those privileges and finally, it can remove any ACLs added to a folder or file under Mac OS X 10.5 Leopard if required.
+If none of this makes sense to you, maybe BatChmod is not for you :-)+
It has the potential to mangle your files if you do not know what you are doing. ESPECIALLY if you change the permission of your whole disk at once... just don’t do that.
http://www.macchampion.com/arbysoft/BatchMod/Welcome.html