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#21
I have the same problem, by proxy. I'm helping a friend try to restore TustedInstaller to their new Windows 7 Home Premium 64Bit machine after they deleted it using Avast. I found the same solution as is posted here, for Vista machines, and tried it. However the step of just copying it into the servicing folder failed miserably for me. I'm not a Windows 7 expert, or even that familiar, but I consider myself to be competent for a non-IT user.
I had no luck accessing the servicing folder. No matter what approach I took, access was denied. I could not copy and paste the copy of TrustedInstaller into the folder. The root admin account was similarly locked out which I found surprising. I suspect there is a simple step I didn't try (eg. turning off read only, or changing permissions for the folder, both of which I tried). It would be very helpfull if Rockstar posted how this is accomplished, or if someone else could.
Fortunately, we're prepared for a full restore approach, so we should be fine. However it would be great for future Avast users on Win7 if we could get all of the instructions in one thread. My experience of finding half finshed threads and solutions was very frustrating.
This is a good example of why I reccomend creating a restore point before you make any changes to your system be it installing a new program or whatever.
It just makes it so much easier to get your system back to where it was before.
I do it before I download a new program, then I scan the program with MSE or Avast or both then I install it. if I decide I no longer want it i can uninstall it then restore my system back to where it was.
I know this doesn't help you now but might want to try it in the future.
I'm not sure it would restore deleted system files. Hope you can get it sorted out without to much trouble but their is a lesson to be learned here, some are harder than others, but learned none the less. Fabe
You can try using TakeOwn, unless that's one of the things that didn't work, of course. I'd just use it on the servicing folder located in C:\Windows\servicing.
Run the program and it will give you a new option to take ownership when you right-click a file or folder.
Don't go wild with it and try to take ownership of an entire drive or your whole Windows folder or something. I made that mistake during the Win7 beta period and regretted it.
A while back Avast! gave me the same report. After the next definition update it was fine. Guess they tweaked the definitions and it was causing a false positive.
Jim