It happens with me many time that I had to copy some files from my pen drive to our college lab and the moment I plugged in my pen drive, it gets infected with dozens of viruses. Yes, its true that our college labs are too infected. Now before I can use the pen drive again, I need to clean it first so that the virus may not spread on more computers. I scan for my USB storage drive using NOD32 and no doubt it completely remove all traces of virus but it wastes my time as I always have over 2 GB of files that I carry with me all the time.So I came to know of this trick of write protecting the drive so that I can safely copy things I want without the worry of virus being copied on my USB flash drive. Although you won’t be able to write any thing on your pen drive, its still very useful in case you want something to copy from your pen drive and don’t want to get infected. Before proceeding I must tell you that playing with the registry can be harmful for your Operating System (OS) and I advise you to take a backup of your registry in case anything goes wrong. Read how to Backup Windows Registry.This trick works only on XP SP2 and you need to have administrator privileges.
· Open Registry Editor by Start > Run.
· Type in regedit.
· Browse to HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SYSTEM\CurrentControlSet\Control\
· Locate the sub-key StorageDevicePolicies. If it doesn’t exist then create it first. Create a new key under Control by right clicking on it so that you don’t create it elsewhere by mistake (as shown in the above screenshot).
· Right click in the blank area of the sub key you just created and create a new DWORD value by the name WriteProtect.
· Double-click it and set the value data as 1 (and 0 for disabling it)
· Click OK, close the Registry Editor and restart the PC.
The drawback of this trick is that you need to remember this trick by yourself and you need to restart the PC after applying this trick. Killing explorer.exe and restarting it will not do the job everytime. I am still looking for any other ways fo protecting your drives and I will post in on my blog if I found a better trick than this one. Share your thoughts in the comment.However,if all else fails and your data is important contact the flash drive manufacture via email or forum.
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