Copying tails persistence to a new usb

Okay so I have a tails usb running on 2.5 and I'm trying to copy this over to my newer tails usb running on 2.6. I have the data unlocked and mounted at /media/amnesia/TailsData When I try to execute nautilus in the root terminal I get these errors even when nothing else is open but the terminal.

(nautilus:6992): Gtk-WARNING **: Failed to register client: GDBus.Error:org.freedesktop.DBus.Error.ServiceUnknown: The name org.gnome.SessionManager was not provided by any .service files nautilus-wipe-Message: Initializing

** (nautilus:6992): CRITICAL **: Another desktop manager in use; desktop window won't be created

** (nautilus:6992): CRITICAL **: nautilus_menu_provider_get_background_items: assertion 'NAUTILUS_IS_MENU_PROVIDER (provider)' failed

** (nautilus:6992): CRITICAL **: nautilus_menu_provider_get_background_items: assertion 'NAUTILUS_IS_MENU_PROVIDER (provider)' failed

It still opens the file browser and I can get to /media/amnesia/TailsData but then the guide tells me to go to /live/persistence/TailsData_unlocked I have no /live to go to it just get bookmarks, electrum, persistent, etc...

What do I do to fix this and copy my persistence over to my new usb?

*Sorry I posted this on r/darknetmarketsnoobs first but recieved no response.


Comments


[1 Points] itsbooming:

Since there is nothing before the first / that's root. You'll need to keep going up/down until you hit root. What I usually do is click computer then go from there.


[1 Points] None:

I can chime in here. Not with any info on how to fix the issue because i recently just did the exact same thing and could not get the files to transfer using the root terminal. I am not that great yet with computers and operating systems.

But i did have access going into tailsdata/live and then dragging the files to my persistent folder on the 2.6 usb. Now i just want to figure out how to encrypt the usb so those files can't just be opened , if that makes sense. I try to soak up as much info as i can but its a never ending learning curve in the IT world, especially those of us who are starting late.