tvzzz

Senior Member
Joined
Jan 14, 2015
Messages
10
I manage an online historic archive for a local historical society. We have many documents, pictures, etc., posted in a Dropbox account, and provide links for all who desire.

I'm concerned that one of us (me or one of the volunteers who has access to the account/collection) might someday inadvertently delete or change something. I would like a way to put a lock on the folder that contains the collection, in order to prevent changes unless a person consciously unlocks it to make intended changes.

Does Windows have such a tool? If not, do you know of a way to do this through some add-on utility program?
 

Solution
Well #1 I would setup a backup such as Carbonite so if something happens you can roll back. There isn't really a locking feature in Windows. You could do one of the following

Remove all but read access to the directory. (Members of the administrators group would have to consciously re-add write access)

Get software such as deep freeze. You mark directories as frozen. Even if you delete the folder a simple reboot will roll it back. When you want to change the directory you put the directory in thaw mode, change and refreeze

Neemobeer

Windows Forum Team
Staff member
Joined
Jul 4, 2015
Messages
8,998
Well #1 I would setup a backup such as Carbonite so if something happens you can roll back. There isn't really a locking feature in Windows. You could do one of the following

Remove all but read access to the directory. (Members of the administrators group would have to consciously re-add write access)

Get software such as deep freeze. You mark directories as frozen. Even if you delete the folder a simple reboot will roll it back. When you want to change the directory you put the directory in thaw mode, change and refreeze
 

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