![]() Somehow it came down from MS and it wasn’t a Windows Update. The app 100% wasn’t installed in the image. Today all my Windows 11 22h2 Enterprise imaged desktops had Teams auto install itself. I prefer to simply copy the files to the folder and then delete them from the original folder as a rule but if you already moved them then you need to deal with it one of the ways recommended above. When you move files from one folder to another you need to be aware of the permissions problem and deal with it one way of the other. Not what I would consider an enterprise class file system! ![]() When you change the permissions at the folder level and inheritance is enabled then basically what happens is NTFS goes through each file and adjusts the permissions. If you copy the file to the new folder then it is a newly created file and therefore will "take a copy" more or less and show them as inherited permissions. The dumber part is that if you move a file from another folder with different permissions that file then retains it's original permissions. Any newly created file will then "inherit" the permissions ONCE on creation. You would assume that by setting a folder to allow inheritance (the standard setting) that anything you placed under that folder would then have the same permissions. ![]() The issue with NTFS is that inheritance really doesn't work.
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