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Debleena S. Hi rein, Did you make any software or hardware changes on your machine prior to these issues? For more information, refer this link. How satisfied are you with this reply? Thanks for your feedback, it helps us improve the site. You should not be getting a Data Execution Prevention error from anything to do with userinit unless your system is afflicted with malicious software or sometime in the past you have been tinkering with the DEP settings in XP.
Data Execution Prevention DEP messages mean that Windows feels threatened by some program running on your computer, so it shuts it down. This is actually a good thing since Windows recognizes the threat and is trying to prevent further damage.
Advice to disable DEP on a system to prevent DEP errors instead of actually fixing the problem is also usually short sighted advice. That is not fixing the problem. DEP is there for a purpose. Of course, XP should never feel threatened by any of it's own programs unless there is something wrong with them. Was the issue preceded by a power interruption, aborted restart, or improper shutdown?
In reply to A. User's post on November 8, Hi jose, Thank you so much for your answer. The memory could not be "written" after clicking OK for so many times, it will proceed to the Log On to Windows window this time, i can see the background of my desktop but there is no any icon on it, instead, "Data Execution Prevention- MSWindows" is shown. My system was working fine until I let my colleague borrowed it from me. In reply to rein's post on November 10, By default, the local Users group should contain the Interactive account and the Authenticated Users group.
At logon, the standard user access token is built, and if the Users group is missing the default members, the user will be unable to interact with the desktop, resulting in the blank desktop being displayed.
For both methods below, you'll need to first restart and select F8 at boot to boot to Safe Mode with Networking. When an administrator logs on, the full administrator access token is split into two access tokens: a full administrator access token and a standard user access token.
During the logon process, the administrative privileges and user rights in the full administrator access token are filtered, resulting in the standard user access token. The standard user access token is then used to launch the Explorer. When the local Users group doesn't contain the default members, the standard user access token doesn't have sufficient permissions available to launch Explorer.
When UAC is turned off, only the full privilege access token is generated for the user and the membership of the local Users group doesn't impact the permissions available in that token.
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