Free security s/w products from Comodo Group:

C

Craig

...
I already visited Comodo forums and I did not found any question or
answer about that. Mr Melih participated to this forum and I hoped him
help me and clarify this issue to all others.

You asked me to address my query to Comodo, I'll do.

Sorry for disturbance
Not so fast, Mokhtar!

Let us know how it goes...That is, if you get a good answer, bad answer
or no answer. We aren't the specialists on Comodo stuff (that's why I
suggested comodo forums) but we're interested in feedback on freeware.
So, don't stay away too long.

Come on back and let us know how things turn out!

thx,
-Craig
 
M

mokhtar.ayeb

Craig said:
Come on back and let us know how things turn out!

Five days after my claim to Comodo, still no answer. I even wrote to
Melih Corner in the Comodo forum, but my message was transferred to
Desktop security product without any answer.

Meanwhile I remain stack with the two Comodo registry keys that I
cannot delete.
Could some body help on that?

Thx
Mokhtar
 
S

Steven Burn

Meanwhile I remain stack with the two Comodo registry keys that I
cannot delete.
Could some body help on that?

That depends on if it's a security reason for not being able to do so or a
not being able to find them reason (in which case, I'd be confused as to how
you know they are there).

If it's a security reason, you can use an alternate reg editor to change the
permissions - thus allowing deletion/modification (note, the reg editor
included in XP should already have the options we need, but to be sure,
we'll launch it using regedt32 instead - which used to be the alternate in
older versions of Windows).

To do this, go to Start > Run and type;

regedt32

Navigate to the key(s) you want to delete and right click them. Select
"Permissions" from the options, and then proceed to ensure your username AND
the system account, have full permissions on the key. Once changed, close
the permissions editor and right click the key(s), then delete them (note,
in some rare cases, a re-boot may be required for the permissions to take
effect).

--
Regards

Steven Burn
Ur I.T. Mate Group
www.it-mate.co.uk

Keeping it FREE!
 
M

mokhtar.ayeb

Steven said:
That depends on if it's a security reason for not being able to do so or a
not being able to find them reason (in which case, I'd be confused as to how
you know they are there).

It is a security reason for not being able to delete them.
I found them with WinAso Registry Optimizer that doesn't succeed to
remove them. Clicking Repair it deletes every thing, but scanning again
I found them still there. With Regedit > edit > find they are there
and they cannot be deleted.

but to be sure, we'll launch it using regedt32 instead
To do this, go to Start > Run and type: regedt32......

Done and it worked perfect.

Thanks a lot Steven

Regards
 
B

brian_ryman1970

I also met the similar permission problem when using other registry
cleaner, and finally I found CleanMyPC Registry Cleaner which takes
care of the permission problem automatically. It seems CleanMyPC can
always get the proper permission automatically when it tries to fix
something. Now I have used it for more than 2 years without any
problem.

-Brian
 

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