![]() I believe it defaults to TrustedInstaller. To do this go back to the same UI and change the owner to your own account. If that doesn't work then you might need to take ownership of the WpSystem. If that works then you can remove your permissions from the root folder again. Finally try moving the folder out of WpSystem. Once you have permissions to RW the folder then go to the Steam folder and repeat the process but this time grant yourself RW to subfolders as well. Attempting to do so on subfolders will likely result in errors. To avoid issues you may need to grant yourself this permission on just the WpSystem folder. If you don't have enough permissions to read and write files and folders then grant yourself permissions. ![]() In the UI go to the Effective Access tab and enter your username to see what permissions you have. ![]() To do that right click the folder and go to Properties and then Security and finally Advanced. If this fails then you don't have permissions even as an admin to do that and you need to take ownership. My recommendation is to use an elevated Explorer window to access the folder (you'll still likely get a warning) and then move the folder containing Steam back to where it was. How Steam was moved there is beyond me because you don't have write permissions to that folder. Unfortunately messing with this directory structure can cause issues so you need to be very careful. The WpSystem is reserved for use by Windows Store apps and even admins aren't supposed to muck with it.
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