But unfortunately, most of the new flash  drives do not come with a write-protect feature as the manufacturers  wish to cut down the cost of production. Hence, the only way to  write-protect your USB flash drives is to enable this feature on your  own computer.
This can be done by adding a small entry  to the Windows registry which acts as a switch that can be enabled to  make use of the write protection or disabled to allow write access. Just  follow these steps:
1. Open the Registry Editor (Open the “Run” dialog box, type regedit and hit “Enter”).
2. Navigate to the following Registry key:
HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SYSTEM\CurrentControlSet\Control\
 3. Create a New Key named as StorageDevicePolicies. To do this right-click on Control, and click on New->Key and name it as StorageDevicePolicies.
4. Now right-click on  StorageDevicePolicies and create a New->DWORD (32-bit) Value and name it as WriteProtect.
5. Double-click on WriteProtect and set the Value data to 1.
Now the right-protection for USB  drives is enabled on your computer (no restart required) and thus it  would not be possible for anyone or any program to add/delete the  contents from your USB flash drive. Any attempt to copy or download the  files onto the USB drive will result in the following error message  being displayed.
To revert and remove the write-protection, all you need to do is just change the Value data for WriteProtect (Step-5) from 1 back to 0. Now write access to all the USB devices is re-enabled. 

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