You are a desktop support technician for your company. A user named Roger uses a Windows XP Professional computer. The computer contains a folder named Sales, which is shared as Sales Documents. The shared folder contains several files. Other users on the network access the shared folder to read and modify the files.
Several users ask Roger to create a simpler name for the shared folder. Roger creates an additional shared folder named SalesDocs, which also provides access to the files in Sales.
Users report that they cannot modify the files when using the SalesDocs share name. However, they are able to modify the files when using the Sales Documents share name.
You need to ensure that users can read and modify the files by using either share name.
What should you do?
A.
Instruct Roger to modify the share permissions on SalesDocs so that the Everyone group has both the Read and Write permissions.
B.
Instruct Roger to modify the NTFS permissions on Sales so that the appropriate domain user groups have both the Read and Write permissions.
C.
Ask an administrator to make Roger a member of the local Administrators group on his computer.
D.
Ask an administrator to make Roger a member of the local Power Users group on his computer.