The Great UAC Debate!


UAC  

1412 members have voted

  1. 1. Do You Use UAC?

    • Yes
      477
    • Yes, On "Silent Mode"
      91
    • No (I use an Admin Account)
      496
    • No (I use a Standard Account)
      39
    • I don't use Windows Vista
      118
  2. 2. Have You Ever Been Saved By UAC?

    • Yes
      226
    • No
      932
    • I don't use Windows Vista
      106


Recommended Posts

So it did not work for you? I am not sure why really since that is how I get RM CPU Clock and Battery Status (both require elevated privileges) to run without getting blocked.

I think MS chose not to provide an exclusion. I don't remember what their defense was, but it was by design. Unfortunately, that makes it rather annoying having to click three times just to run the blocked program. Since you've two, it would take you six clicks total just to get them started.

Did you put a check box on "Run with highest privileges"?

Make sure to disable the program's built-in autostart within its settings or preferences. For example, my RM CPU Clock program has the option to "Run at Windows startup". This box is unchecked to prevent conflict. Maybe it's starting from some start key rather than using the Task Scheduler.

Edited by KevinN206
I think MS chose not to provide an exclusion. I don't remember what their defense was, but it was by design. .

sorry kevin, i should have stated in my last post that using task scheduler DOES fix the 'problem'. those screenies in first post are before workaround with ts. i just don't agree with having to resort to a 'workaround' to have a valid program open on boot. i understand why they have implemented it. but if ms would just add a tick box to 'remember choice' for each new program loading at boot so you wouldn't have to click 3 times to start OR use task scheduler i'd be happy. :) i'll have to google their defense.

sorry kevin, i should have stated in my last post that using task scheduler DOES fix the 'problem'. those screenies in first post are before workaround with ts. i just don't agree with having to resort to a 'workaround' to have a valid program open on boot. i understand why they have implemented it. but if ms would just add a tick box to 'remember choice' for each new program loading at boot so you wouldn't have to click 3 times to start OR use task scheduler i'd be happy. :) i'll have to google their defense.

Having a 'remember' option could leave systems open to vulnerability. If any app you set to 'remember' so much as uses a file open dialog, you've just made a pretty big privilege escallation exploit.

UAC is by far the best feature of Vista. i honestly don't understand why anyone would have a problem with it. i guess they don't like to be in control.

For me I feel leaving UAC enabled is jsut being paranoid, I know enough about what to run and what not to run to keep my system safe, without the annoyance of UAC popping up and forcing me to respond. I run Nod32, plus Windows Defender is running, and a firewall on my router. ANything more than that for me is overkill.

Without UAC I have been running Vista smoothly for about 6 months, with no issues. So I really don't see the point for users, who are already 'in control' of their system.

For me I feel leaving UAC enabled is jsut being paranoid, I know enough about what to run and what not to run to keep my system safe, without the annoyance of UAC popping up and forcing me to respond. I run Nod32, plus Windows Defender is running, and a firewall on my router. ANything more than that for me is overkill.

Without UAC I have been running Vista smoothly for about 6 months, with no issues. So I really don't see the point for users, who are already 'in control' of their system.

I don't mean for this to sound demeaning in any way but you do realise that "Nod32, plus Windows Defender is running, and a firewall on my router" can't protect you from what UAC does?

Won't happen.

If users (and I mean a statistically significant number, not Neowin members) wanted those options, we'd build them. We don't build them becuause nobody wants them, and there are better things to be building that people do want. Perhaps you misread my statement?

I'm not sure what you're referring to. If users wanted a less-intrusive UAC, then you'd build those options? Given from a lot of the reviews of Vista that I've read and the fact that Apple specifically made an ad about UAC being annoying, I'm going to say it's a big issue.

Will people defect to OSX and all? Not in large numbers, but if you stop listening to your customers, you're doomed. People don't like UAC because it's annoying. Shouldn't be too hard to think of a way to fix... in fact, a third-party ap did it. If you think it's so vital that people keep it on, you all should have made something like that the default.

People don't like UAC because it's annoying.

Speak for yourself my friend - because a vast majority of people don't switch off UAC - I can imagine that lots of people don't even know you can.

As for Apple and the FUD they spread in their adverts - well only a complete mug will believe marketing speak....

For me I feel leaving UAC enabled is jsut being paranoid, I know enough about what to run and what not to run to keep my system safe, without the annoyance of UAC popping up and forcing me to respond. I run Nod32, plus Windows Defender is running, and a firewall on my router. ANything more than that for me is overkill.

Without UAC I have been running Vista smoothly for about 6 months, with no issues. So I really don't see the point for users, who are already 'in control' of their system.

Zero-day vunerabilities.

Speak for yourself my friend - because a vast majority of people don't switch off UAC - I can imagine that lots of people don't even know you can.

As for Apple and the FUD they spread in their adverts - well only a complete mug will believe marketing speak....

I said "People." I never said "everyone." I was giving a reason why people don't like it.

I said "People." I never said "everyone." I was giving a reason why people don't like it.

Ok - so by "People" did you mean the majority or the minority?

For me I feel leaving UAC enabled is jsut being paranoid, I know enough about what to run and what not to run to keep my system safe, without the annoyance of UAC popping up and forcing me to respond. I run Nod32, plus Windows Defender is running, and a firewall on my router. ANything more than that for me is overkill.

Without UAC I have been running Vista smoothly for about 6 months, with no issues. So I really don't see the point for users, who are already 'in control' of their system.

A virus protector will only catch known threat is considered a virus. For eg. some key loggers would not be caught as a virus or threat even by Nod32. There are web sites that can run scripts in the background and you will never know since all programs have admin rights.

I have not had a virus in years so should I decide not to use a virus protector?

Edited by Deihmos
I didn't imply either. Don't put words in my mouth. I don't know if it's a majority or minority and never even pretended to know as much. :rolleyes:

So you are asking Microsoft to fix UAC problem which only the minority of users may be complaining about ?

And TweakUAC doesn't fix UAC and make it less intrusive - it actually makes it pointless as processes which request elevation at startup are granted it at automatically - even if the code is malicious.

So you are asking Microsoft to fix UAC problem which only the minority of users may be complaining about ?

And TweakUAC doesn't fix UAC and make it less intrusive - it actually makes it pointless as processes which request elevation at startup are granted it at automatically - even if the code is malicious.

It still manages to prevent a process from running amok without spawning another one that requests the privileges explicity first. It's better than nothing, I guess.

If Vista ever made UAC unable to be turned off, I'd leave Vista forever. That's how frustrated I get from the relentless, stubborn messages asking me to confirm an action I just committed.

Being a programmer, I move files around a lot, copy them to different folders, and delete what I don't need anymore. UAC bugged me until I finally did a Google search to read on how to disable it.

This topic is now closed to further replies.
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Posts

    • Windows Server gets DNS over HTTPS (DoH) support by Usama Jawad For the past few months, Microsoft has been previewing DNS over HTTPS (DoH) for Windows DNS Server, touting it as a foundational upgrade for zero-trust enterprise networks. It essentially introduces encrypted, authenticated DNS for the networks rather than transmitting DNS traffic in clear. Now, the company has introduced the general availability (GA) of this feature. The GA of DoH encourages organizations to deploy the solution in production environments without implementing a new client-to-resolver architecture. DoH helps improve the overall security of the network and reduces the risk of spoofing due to its zero-trust design. This is a significant change because pretty much every interaction with the network requires interfacing with DNS. DoH offers several advantages over standard DNS traffic, such as encryption using HTTPS, preventing unauthorized inspection, man-in-the-middle attacks, and traffic analysis. Since it leverages TLS certificates so that clients can verify the identity of the DNS server, it prevents spoofing through this authentication mechanism. Additionally, it's built on the DoH standard defined by the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF), which means that it should work with modern RFC 8484-compliant clients. Finally, it integrates into the existing network architecture seamlessly and can even run in parallel with standard DNS, so that customers can migrate to the new technology at their own pace. Microsoft says that in the past few months of preview, DoH has become more stable, and customers can confidently deploy it in production environments with proper guidance. Microsoft has emphasized that migrating to DoH is necessary for organizations that are moving toward zero-trust DNS solutions. Windows clients already support DoH, but the latest availability on Windows Server provides encrypted DNS to all endpoints. The company has also mentioned that "while this release focuses on encrypting client-to-resolver communication, support for encrypted communication between Windows DNS Server and upstream DNS resolvers is planned for a future update." You can follow Microsoft's guidance to deploy DoH here, but keep in mind that you need a Windows Server 2025 installation with the latest Patch Tuesday updates installed.
    • Lol I had one of these turn faulty in Jan, guess it wasn't just bad luck lol
    • I'm team Rossmann all the way. I have the exact same NVME, altough not in an array like him.
    • It had gone weeks ago. Although thinking about it I'm on the beta.
    • They thought value of their goods would forever only drop like it used to and didn't account for sudden increase in price because of all the Ai hype. Tough luck Samsung, don't try to weasel this one out. Also American customer protection laws are a**. In Europe, you need to be compensated for a functioning product of same or better characteristics (not same price point as when it was originally bought!) if it can't be repaired and when you receive a replacement product your warranty starts from scratch because you received a different item than you previously had and old warranty thus cannot apply to it anymore. If your actual item was successfully repaired, warranty gets extended for the period the item was in service. If item is repaired to a significant extent, warranty also starts over from scratch because major part of it was replaced. Americans need to fight to get this kind of consumer protections because they are constantly getting screwed over.
  • Recent Achievements

    • Week One Done
      davidbazooked earned a badge
      Week One Done
    • One Month Later
      Jamswaz earned a badge
      One Month Later
    • Week One Done
      Jamswaz earned a badge
      Week One Done
    • Rookie
      Marzoid went up a rank
      Rookie
    • Community Regular
      coch went up a rank
      Community Regular
  • Popular Contributors

    1. 1
      +primortal
      511
    2. 2
      PsYcHoKiLLa
      184
    3. 3
      +Edouard
      159
    4. 4
      Steven P.
      83
    5. 5
      ATLien_0
      75
  • Tell a friend

    Love Neowin? Tell a friend!