Comment 7 for bug 116564

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Jayson Vaughn (thedonvaughn) wrote :

Hello,
I understand what you're saying, the reason it was rejected is because this issue cannot be reproduced. The nature of UNIX permissions, if the file didn't allow you to delete it, neither nautilus or gnome-trash applet would be able to remove it. The reason, I'm assuming, you were able to delete the file before was a) You were apart of the same group as that file and it the group permission was set to read-write or read-write-execute or b) The world, or all other, bit was set to read-write or read-write-execute. I am simply unable to make nautilus or gnome trash act as you described with a file or directory that I do not own or have permission to modify. If you are able to and can reproduce it, by all means please show us so this can be fixed.
Also you say that they both handle the situation differently, one gives a warning and the other does not. I am a tad confused on this because I can not even open a file with trash through nautilus or gnome trash applet. This is the reason I set the bug to rejected.