steps that an administrator can take to block permission inheritance using the Active Directory Users and Computers tool
block inheritence
no override
Networks allow the sharing of files, printers and other resources. Networks also allow an administrator to control the security settings on all computers which are connected to it through Active Directory.
Write permission (w)
look on google gosh
It is a sub directory in a hierarchy of directories. For example, My Pictures is a child of My Documents: C:\Documents and Settings\Administrator\My Documents\My Pictures
"/" is the root directory in Linux. Make sure not to confuse this with the "/root" directory, which is the home directory for the user "root" (similar to "Administrator" on Windows)
Any domain administrators Enterprise administrator
Either an administrator or a member of the administrators group. ^^^^^ Administrators must be given explicit permission or be a member of the Schema Administrators group to make changes to the schema. ^^^^^
This directory is the same thing as their homepage. You can access it by typing their web address into your computers browser and hitting enter. Their directory will them appear.
Administrator group
In UNIX, this is the "sticky bit"... if set on a directory, only the owner of the directory, the owner of the individual file, and the superuser are allowed to delete files created in that directory. If not set, anyone with write permission on the directory can delete or rename files in it.
yes users are the important part of active directory as the users are assigned the permission to use the resources, groups, printers .We can assign users to a group and apply permission on them we can put them in OU and apply restriction /permission etc.Without users there is no meaning of resources.
It all depends on what you change the permissions to. The directory may become inaccessible, not writeable, or readable, depending on the change.