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I am running Ubuntu 20.04.2, and am having a problem with cutting, renaming, or moving files in my NTFS partition. It appears to be that I don't have the appropriate permissions, but when I check them I have full read, write, and execute permissions. Here's a terminal window outlining the discrepancy:

Cannot move file, read-only file system

And here is the same problem through in Nautilus:

all access rights

greyed out write options

I've run chmod several times; what am I missing?

Zanna
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sam
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    Does this answer your question? [Why does my NTFS partition mount as read only?](https://askubuntu.com/questions/70281/why-does-my-ntfs-partition-mount-as-read-only) – muru Apr 27 '21 at 21:46
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    A read-only file-system means it's RO & permissions on files don't mean anything (the RO file-system is due to detected problem or other found in logs, and trumps any file-system as writing to the drive may result in data loss, so your system prevents this by flipping the *fs* to RO). Trying to `chmod` on a RO *fs* is a waste of time & user-error, as the reason the *fs* is RO should be investigated & fixed; your system is trying to protect your data, but you want to destroy it? by writing to a problematic *fs* ? Read your messages & explore why. – guiverc Apr 27 '21 at 22:29
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    Which answer should be used? The accepted one and many others are obsolete (`ntfs-3g` is installed by default). – Zanna May 18 '21 at 07:45

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