How to eliminate Event code 3036 warning

Moondoggy

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My Windows 7-64-bit machine is reporting an event 3036 warning each time the WSearch service is started. Although benign, I would like to be able to fix this issue. I have searched the internet for a solution and have come up empty handed Here are the details:

Event type: Application
Source: Search
Event ID: 3036
Level: Warning
Event Source: Windows Search Service
Context: Application, Systemindex catalog
Details: The object was not found. (HRESULT : 0x80041201) (0x80041201)
The content source csc://s-1-5-21-287814290-815585838-4093042447-1000 cannot be accessed

If anyone knows how to eliminate this event, please let me know.
 

My Computer

Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Generic
OS
Windows 7
CPU
Intel Core i7 920
Motherboard
Asus P6T
Memory
6 GB
Graphics Card(s)
Sapphire 4850 Vapor-x, 1GB Memory
Hard Drives
Western Digital 1 TB SATA
PSU
Enermax Modo 82+ 525w
Case
Ultra

My Computer

Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Samsung NP550P5C-S02IN
OS
Windows 7 Ultimate - 64-bit | Windows 8 Pro - 64-bit
CPU
Intel® Core™ i7 Processor 3,610QM (2.30Hz, 6MB L3 Cach
Memory
8 GB
Graphics Card(s)
NVIDIA® GeForce® GT 650M 2GB Graphics, Optimus™ techno
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SoundAlive™ JBL 3 Speakers (With sub-Woofer)
Monitor(s) Displays
39.62cm (15.6) SuperBright 300nit HD+ LED Display
Screen Resolution
1,600 x 900, Anti-Reflective
Hard Drives
1TB S-ATA II Hard Drive (5,400RPM)
OK. I have a work around but I don't believe it's a fix.

On another forum site someone said that the CSC in the event stood for "Client Side Caching" and that if I turned off indexing of Offline Files then the warning message would go away. It did.

I'm still a bit perplexed by the event and perhaps someone can shed more light on this. From what I gather if you do want to work on off-line files then a copy of the file would be stored somewhere on my PC which I assume to be the C:\Windows\CSC folder and the way I had it set up before the search service was attempting to index any offline files stored in that folder. I would also "assume" that it you have never had a need to work with offline files then the CSC folder would be empty therefore nothing to index. But, the warning was not that there was nothing to index the warning was that something could not be accessed. What I'm "assuming" is that the underlying problem still exists and that it I found the real cause of the access issue then the step taken to turn off caching of offline files would be unnecessary. So, even though I have a work around I would really still like to determine what the issue is so if anyone has any next steps I'd appreciate the help.
 

My Computer

Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Generic
OS
Windows 7
CPU
Intel Core i7 920
Motherboard
Asus P6T
Memory
6 GB
Graphics Card(s)
Sapphire 4850 Vapor-x, 1GB Memory
Hard Drives
Western Digital 1 TB SATA
PSU
Enermax Modo 82+ 525w
Case
Ultra
I have a solution but I''m not sure that I understand why things were the way they were.
To make a long story short I tried drilling down into the CSC folder and in the only subfolder in CSC I was denied access but when I looked at the security it said that there wasn't even an owner of the folder so I took ownership. I then drilled down into that folder and found 2 more folders that had no owners either so I took ownership of those two. Note that taking ownership was the only thing I did. I then when back into the indexing function in control panel, turned on indexing on the off line folders restarted my system and NO Warning. Seems that no ownership was the issue which I'm not not going to try and figure out because I won't find an answer to that anyway.
 

My Computer

Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Generic
OS
Windows 7
CPU
Intel Core i7 920
Motherboard
Asus P6T
Memory
6 GB
Graphics Card(s)
Sapphire 4850 Vapor-x, 1GB Memory
Hard Drives
Western Digital 1 TB SATA
PSU
Enermax Modo 82+ 525w
Case
Ultra
I changed the permissions on the CSC folder, and subfolders v2.0.6, namespace, and temp folders as suggested by ‘Moondoggy’ above and restarting the Windows Search service, but the system still logs the same Event ID 3036 message.

I also followed the suggestion made by ‘Capt.Jack Sparrow’ above and opening RegEdit and searching for ‘[FONT=&quot]csc://{S-1-5-21-3665831002-2378558863-465300187-1001}/’[/FONT], and it found the following registry keys:

Find_1: HKEY_CURRENT_USER\Software\Microsoft\Windows Search\ProcessedSearchRoots\0002

Find_2: HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Microsoft\Windows Search\CrawlScopeManager\Windows\SystemIndex\DefaultRules\18

Find_3: HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Microsoft\Windows Search\CrawlScopeManager\Windows\SystemIndex\SearchRoots\0

Find_4: HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Microsoft\Windows Search\CrawlScopeManager\Windows\SystemIndex\WorkingSetRules\24

Find_5: HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Microsoft\Windows Search\Gather\Windows\SystemIndex\Sites\{S-1-5-21-3665831002-2378558863-465300187-1001}\Paths\0

Find_6: HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Microsoft\Windows Search\Gather\Windows\SystemIndex\StartPages\13

Find_7: HKEY_USERS\S-1-5-21-3665831002-2378558863-465300187-1001\Software\Microsoft\Windows Search\ProcessedSearchRoots\0002

Finished searching through the registry.

Now the question is which of these seven registry keys do I change to give full permission?

Thanks for any help anyone can provide.
 

My Computer

Computer type
Laptop
Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Lenovo
OS
Windows 7 Pro SP1 64-bit
CPU
Intel Core i7-2760QM CPU @ 2.40GHz
Motherboard
Lenovo 4260-X01 with Intel Chipset (Sandy Bridge)
Memory
32GB
Graphics Card(s)
Nvidia Quadro 1000M
Hard Drives
TOSHIBA MQ01ABD100 - 1TB SATA 5,400 RPM
Antivirus
Avira
Browser
Firefox, Chrome, Explorer,
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