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

I understand that UAC can be a useful feature for -some- people but not to everyone.

I'm a power-user. I've been working with computers for over a decade. I know what I should and should not execute. Nobody uses my PC except for me. Got a virus once and it was Tai-Pan back in my early years.

All that to say: UAC can most definately be a pain in the arse for people who know EXACTLY what they are doing. Sure some people need the extra padding in case they get hurt... but for some it's more of a nuisance than anything else.

UAC is a feature among lots of other things that hold me back from Vista.

What took me 2 seconds before now takes me 30 seconds. Talk about productivity. 4 extra steps to get the same job done.

/end Vista rant

The problem with UAC is that pops up too often and for the most cases when it's not needed to. For example. If you start event viewer UAC will pop up. Absolutely there is no need for it. Let's say you want to delete shortcut from start menu. Well, it does it again. If UAC 'wakes up' only for the things it needs to, everything would be cool.

I know what I should and should not execute.

The general point that a lot of us are trying to make is that while you might, all of your software might not be so smart. It's better to limit its access to the system so that it can't, either by exploit or accident, do bad things on a system-wide level.

If you start event viewer UAC will pop up. Absolutely there is no need for it.

Some parts of the event log are not things that software running under a limitted acount should have access to. There's a considerable amount of information about your system in there, and not all of it pertains to your user account. It's possible that some of it could be dangerous under the right circumstances. Maybe what we need is something more like the Task manager, where you can see YOUR stuff, but can't get to the system stuff unless you elevate have it launch a new, elevated, copy of itself. (That's how I feel regedit should be done.)

The general point that a lot of us are trying to make is that while you might, all of your software might not be so smart. It's better to limit its access to the system so that it can't, either by exploit or accident, do bad things on a system-wide level.

Some parts of the event log are not things that software running under a limitted acount should have access to. There's a considerable amount of information about your system in there, and not all of it pertains to your user account. It's possible that some of it could be dangerous under the right circumstances. Maybe what we need is something more like the Task manager, where you can see YOUR stuff, but can't get to the system stuff unless you elevate have it launch a new, elevated, copy of itself. (That's how I feel regedit should be done.)

So you're saying that should be able to access application as yourself or Admin. And if you do as yourself you get only get the limited rights so there is no need for UAC. I agree. It's like the same idea where on the web page you have admin and user access. User can do less then Admin.

So you're saying that should be able to access application as yourself or Admin. And if you do as yourself you get only get the limited rights so there is no need for UAC. I agree. It's like the same idea where on the web page you have admin and user access. User can do less then Admin.

Without an elevation prompt, you aren't an admin. Your applictions are running just as if you were a regular "user." Only if the application requests admin privileges at start-up, and you click "Continue," does it launch with admin privileges.

The Event Viewer needs to launch with admin privileges because it shows you information about other users. Non-admins are not allowed to see information about other users. That would be a security / privacy violation.

I'm a power-user. I've been working with computers for over a decade. I know what I should and should not execute. Nobody uses my PC except for me. Got a virus once and it was Tai-Pan back in my early years.

UAC has nothing to do with what you should and should not execute. The fact that you do not understand the difference between privileged and non-privileged execution tells me that you are probably not as much of a "power-user" as you think you are.

What took me 2 seconds before now takes me 30 seconds. Talk about productivity. 4 extra steps to get the same job done.

/end Vista rant

If it takes you 28 seconds to click "Continue" and you consider this to be "4 extra steps" then I would again have to say you are no "power-user."

On a few systems, the switch to the secure desktop can add a delay. On my laptop, if I'm watching a video, the switch can be pretty slow on occasion, which is why I've disabled it the secure desktop on that machine. It didn't always do it. But when it did, it was very, very annoying.

I can't be saved by UAC because I don't download crap.

Seriously, come on. To get a virus or a trojan or a worm, you seriously have to look for it.

Sometimes I really see some people being surprised by having viruses in porn stuff, phishing or dubious websites with porn on them, downloading illegal stuff with gutella or something. Come on.

I remember when I found 1000 things with ad-aware on my friend's PC, half of these being cookies, what's wrong with the other half? I swear he looked hard on the net to get all this crap.

I can't be saved by UAC because I don't download crap.

If you're going to post anything in this thread, at the very least read a few of the posts in it. Numerous scenarios in which UAC can offer a nice layer of protection have been presented. Very few, if any, of them require you to actively download and run some executable file. Most of them have to do with 0-day exploits which you have no control over, and can do absolutely nothing to protect yourself against.

I don't currently use Vista (downgraded back to XP), but when I did use it, I gave UAC a shot. Then I realized that it was prompting me for permission to copy and paste basic files. I killed it immediately after that.

Here's the problem: UAC, as a concept, isn't bad. Similar things are available in Leopard and Linux (at least Ubuntu, not sure about other distributions). However, UAC should have been smart enough out of the box to not prompt the user for permission for every single little thing. As a result, people just turn it off rather than take the time to adjust the settings to something more reasonable. I know I didn't want to do Microsoft's work for them and make UAC usable. It was much simpler to just turn it off.

Besides, as long as you're a safe user, then there's not a lot for UAC to protect you from. I know that I ran my computer unprotected (i.e. no firewall, no virus scan) for about six months before I decided I should probably run a virus/spyware scan. Stupid, I know, but I never got around to getting the software. Wanna know what the scans came up with? Absolutely zero viruses, and maybe a handful of cookies. That's it. Because of this, I get the feeling that the importance of internet security is overhyped in order to make money for the software manufacturers. After all, it's much wiser, from a financial standpoint, to convince users that they need to give you money to be safe rather than just educate themselves on how to use a computer.

Then I realized that it was prompting me for permission to copy and paste basic files. I killed it immediately after that.

It only prompts when you do that outside your user folder, as every other major operating system (Linux, UNIX, BSD, OSX, etc) will do by default.

It only prompts when you do that outside your user folder, as every other major operating system (Linux, UNIX, BSD, OSX, etc) will do by default.

Really? Hmm, maybe it just hasn't been as "in your face" before. Are you talking about the "These files are hidden. Modifying these may affect your system" (or whatever) message?

Really? Hmm, maybe it just hasn't been as "in your face" before. Are you talking about the "These files are hidden. Modifying these may affect your system" (or whatever) message?

No. I'm referring to the fact that under Vista, if you make an attempt to copy and paste a file into a directory that "Users" or your user account do not have explicit Write access to, you will get a UAC prompt.

Under every major operating system, you will either get a big fat "Access Denied" message, or get a prompt for root username and password if you try to do the exact same thing.

If you have complaints about UAC, file operations outside your user folder shouldn't be one of them, as UAC is actually the fastest/easiest (Just click 'Continue') dialog of all the other major implementations.

In linux when you try and move something to the root folder for example all it does is spit out an access denied error and I have to launch the file browser as root to do anything there... Vista's prompt is arguably more convenient.

Not really sure what OSX does as I haven't been able to use it except at school where I can't do anything anyway lol.

If it takes you 28 seconds to click "Continue" and you consider this to be "4 extra steps" then I would again have to say you are no "power-user."

I wasn't even referring to the UAC at that point in my post. I know you seem to defend UAC at all cost but it's no reason to take shots at someone at every occasion.

I was talking about Vista in general. What took me 3 seconds in XP now takes me much longer due to useless extra steps.

And as far as UAC goes, you shouldn't debate the fact that UAC is annoying because even an employee of Microsoft admited that UAC was annoying on purpose. Useful or not is a whole different story. It never saved me from anything, it did pop-up way too many times.

There's a reason I always use an admin account on my PC, it's because I know what I'm doing and don't need the extra 200 triple-checks about every single decisions I make. If I ever need to be ultra safe and feel like I'm in a cardbox I'll think about using a non-admin account.

I know almost nothing about *nix but do you get elevation prompts when logged in as root ? Probably not because you shouldn't have been using 'root' in the first place. An elevation prompt asking for me the admin pass to execute something along with a message informing me about the potention effect is fine by me. But being on an ADMIN ACCOUNT and still being asked if i'm very very sure is just a pain in the arse IMO. I think it would be much more efficient than UAC.

No prompts for Admin accounts. And when using a non-admin one, everytime you do something that requires admin rights, THEN you get a prompt for a password along with some info about what the program is trying to access/modify.

@Brandon Live: I'm glad you find UAC useful. But that's your POV and I respect it. Try to do the same with others. To each their own.

GG.

@Brandon Live: I'm glad you find UAC useful. But that's your POV and I respect it. Try to do the same with others. To each their own.

it's not that it's useful. it's that it's a security feature and it isn't anyone's point of view it's a fact. your opinion is a point of view because you've made your decision without having all the facts (if you had actually read the thread you would be aware of the facts). there is no reason that i know of to turn off UAC, to run in silent mode yes but not to rurn it off entirely. silent mode still protects you from exploits within application to some extent which it can't do if it's off.

this is why microsoft should have never given the option to turn off UAC. put in silent mode yeah, but not turn it off. there's just so many people that don't have the facts and just turn ot off because it's annoying. but that's microsoft's fault.

it's not that it's useful. it's that it's a security feature and it isn't anyone's point of view it's a fact. your opinion is a point of view because you've made your decision without having all the facts (if you had actually read the thread you would be aware of the facts). there is no reason that i know of to turn off UAC, to run in silent mode yes but not to rurn it off entirely. silent mode still protects you from exploits within application to some extent which it can't do if it's off.

this is why microsoft should have never given the option to turn off UAC. put in silent mode yeah, but not turn it off. there's just so many people that don't have the facts and just turn ot off because it's annoying. but that's microsoft's fault.

I'm not denying the fact that UAC is a security feature. I'm saying that UAC is not useful for ME and yes that's a POV.

Having a realtime Anti-virus running in the background has to do with security, but having one installed comes down to personal needs and knowledge. The security benefits remain the same for everyone, but my mom for instance would need one, me on the other hand would not. (there are times where I would install one before running a suspicious app but generally speaking no.)

I'm not saying that UAC is a mistake.

Picture it this way... in XP I never had to deal with elevation prompts while running full-time administrator. I never had a single problem with my decisions. In Vista I have to deal with numerous prompts for extra padding when I clearly do not need it.

System Restore ? it's off. UAC ? it's off. If something bad happens (which never happened up to now) I have an image ready to be restored in 3 minutes.

Turning off UAC would be XP's way of handling things, no ? If I never had a problem in XP why would I have one in Vista ?

In the end it's a security feature that not everyone can truly benefit. You're not tech-saavy, use UAC. You don't have an image/partitions/backup/etc to be safer, use UAC. You want all the extra security you can get, sure go ahead and leave UAC activated.

If things EVER do go wrong I'll turn to my system snapshot instead of the too many prompts that UAC brings me.

So yeah, UAC is not about usefulness, it's about the extra SECURITY FEATURE I do not need.

ok, i will try to explain more clearly. there aren't just two option for UAC. you can have it ON, SILENT or OFF. silent is exactly the same as off from an end user perspective but still takes advantage of UAC. thus increasing your security without putting you to any extra hassle (no confirmation to click through).

if you feel that you are tech savvy enough to not require the confirmation then put UAC into silent mode.

the tool to put UAC into silent mode can be found here http://www.tweak-uac.com/

ok, i will try to explain more clearly. there aren't just two option for UAC. you can have it ON, SILENT or OFF. silent is exactly the same as off from an end user perspective but still takes advantage of UAC. thus increasing your security without putting you to any extra hassle (no confirmation to click through).

if you feel that you are tech savvy enough to not require the confirmation then put UAC into silent mode.

the tool to put UAC into silent mode can be found here http://www.tweak-uac.com/

Putting UAC in silent mode is a worthy solution.

I don't mind having the extra security if it doesn't appear to be a nuisance to my everyday work on the computer. Being an avid fan of multi-tasking these elevation prompts can get really annoying for me compared to someone who opens 1 application once every 2 hours.

If the security feature remains invisible to the end-user there shouldn't be ANY reasons to not have it at least on silent.

Putting UAC in silent mode is a worthy solution.

I don't mind having the extra security if it doesn't appear to be a nuisance to my everyday work on the computer. Being an avid fan of multi-tasking these elevation prompts can get really annoying for me compared to someone who opens 1 application once every 2 hours.

If the security feature remains invisible to the end-user there shouldn't be ANY reasons to not have it on silent.

yeah, this seems to be everyone's respone once they find out that they CAN run UAC in silent mode. this is no one's fault but microsoft. it seems pretty clear to me that silent mode should have been included as an option as an alternative to turning it off. people are very resonable, if they had been given the option to just hide the prompts they would use it.

:( very disappointing when microsoft is supposed to care about security.

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

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Posts

    • I remember when Louis used to just do interesting Mac/iPhone repairs, now he's boring and just launches "crusades" every week
    • A shame it don't allow people to bypass the MS account, I will stick to using Rufus.
    • Microsoft about to radically change how often your Edge browser updates by Paul Hill Microsoft has just announced that starting with Edge 152, it will be moving to a two-week release cycle for faster, smaller updates. This faster release cadence will begin on August 27. This change comes just several months after Microsoft switched Visual Studio Code to weekly updates. The company said that the Extended Stable releases will remain on an eight-week cycle and that no admin changes are needed to experience the faster release cycle on the Stable channel. The new two-week release cycle will enable the faster delivery of security updates and platform improvements, all while reducing the size and complexity of individual updates. Microsoft claims that organizations will benefit from this change as it offers predictable validation cycles. For organizations that prefer a “more deliberate pace”, the Extended Stable channel remains an option. This change will affect Edge Stable releases on Windows, macOS, Linux, and mobile. The Extended Stable channel will continue to be updated every eight weeks, or every fourth Stable release, for example: versions 152, 156, 160, and 164. The Extended Stable could be a good option for organizations that don’t want the latest updates twice a month and don’t want as much hassle constantly updating browsers. In the case of Visual Studio Code, many of the updates being pushed by Microsoft are AI-related. As we all know, Microsoft Edge has a lot of AI features, so we could see Microsoft pushing more AI, thanks to the faster cycles. On the flip side, quicker releases could mean faster security updates, which is beneficial in a world where AI systems are hunting for software exploits. What do you think? Let us know in the comments. For more updates on Edge, be sure to follow Neowin's coverage. In May alone, we reported on Edge offering in-browser pop-ups to assist users with website compatibility issues, that Edge was losing Copilot Mode, and that Microsoft had fixed a plain-text password bug in Edge. Source: Microsoft 365 Admin Center
    • not yet, because at the moment it is not a threat to MS, if and I mean if it did become a threat to MS Office, then it may be a different thing. MS don't like competition
    • Zen Browser 1.21b by Razvan Serea Zen Browser is a privacy-focused, open-source web browser built on Mozilla Firefox, offering users a secure and customizable browsing experience. It emphasizes privacy by blocking trackers, ads, and ensuring your data isn't collected. With Zen Mods, users can enhance their browser experience with various customization options, including features like split views and vertical tabs. The browser is designed for efficiency, providing fast browsing speeds and a lightweight interface. Zen Browser prioritizes user control over the browsing experience, offering a minimal yet powerful alternative to traditional web browsers while keeping your online activity private. Zen Browser’s DRM limitation Zen Browser currently lacks support for DRM-protected content, meaning streaming services like Netflix and HBO Max are inaccessible. This is due to the absence of a Widevine license, which requires significant costs and is financially unfeasible for the developer. Additionally, applying for this license would require Zen to be part of a larger company, similar to Mozilla or Brave. Therefore, DRM-protected media won't be supported in Zen Browser for the foreseeable future. Zen Browser offers features that improve user experience, privacy, and customization: Privacy-Focused: Blocks trackers and minimizes data collection. Automatic Updates: Keeps the browser updated with security patches. Zen Mods: Customizable themes and layouts. Workspaces: Organize tabs into different workspaces. Compact Mode: Maximizes screen space by minimizing UI elements. Zen Glance: Quick website previews. Split Views: View multiple tabs in the same window. Sidebar: Access bookmarks and tools quickly. Vertical Tabs: Manage tabs vertically. Container Tabs: Separate browsing sessions. Fast Profile Switcher: Switch between profiles easily. Tab Folders: Organize tabs into folders. Customizable UI: Personalize browser interface. Security Features: Inherits Firefox’s robust security. Fast Performance: Lightweight and optimized for speed. Zen Mods Customization: Deep customization with mods. Quick Access: Easy access to favorite websites. Open Source: Built on Mozilla Firefox with community collaboration. Community-Driven: Active development and feedback from users. GitHub Repository: Contribute and review the source code. Zen Browser 1.21b changelog: New Features Updated to Firefox 151.0.4 Added 'Space Routing', a new feature that allows you to route links to a specific Space. To get started, click on the three dots in your Space name and click on 'Space Routing Settings'. Fixes Fixed extension-opened tabs not being created with the correct container (#14100) Fixed a bug with the Boosts editor having the wrong theme colors (#14099) Improved overflowing space icons being inaccessible and improved the feeling when hovering over them (#13747) Other minor bug fixes and improvements Download: Zen Browser | 89.8 MB (Open Source) Download: Zen Browser ARM64 | Other Operating Systems View: Zen Browser Home Page | Screenshots 1 | 2 | Reddit Get alerted to all of our Software updates on Twitter at @NeowinSoftware
  • 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
      514
    2. 2
      PsYcHoKiLLa
      185
    3. 3
      +Edouard
      159
    4. 4
      Steven P.
      83
    5. 5
      ATLien_0
      75
  • Tell a friend

    Love Neowin? Tell a friend!