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

Nevermind the fact that most peope "saved" by UAC will never know it. That's like asking if their eating habits have helped them avoid getting sick. They'll never know if drinking less orange juice would have meant they'd have gotten sick sometime when they didn't.

Well... in order for them to be saved, they'd need to refuse permissions to an application. So I think they'd know that they denied an application access, and would likely only do that if they thought there was a risk.

UAC not only asks for your permission, but if it is a malicious program is also needs to be installed at the administrator level. People would also have to right click the installer and manually choose to run it as an Administrator. The program will install no matter what after clicking yes to the UAC prompt, but it will not run properly unless it is installed and ran as an administrator. That is the benifit of UAC, it prompts for approval and then won't run correctly without being ran as an Administrator. The malicious program may even cause a run prompt every time you turn on your computer.

Well... in order for them to be saved, they'd need to refuse permissions to an application. So I think they'd know that they denied an application access, and would likely only do that if they thought there was a risk.

UAC isn't just that dialog. it means all programs have by default lower privelage level until they have been elevated. therefore when an exploit is found in a piece of software and exploited it's ability to affect the system is severly limited, as in it can only access non crucial areas of the system like the Users folder.

UAC not only asks for your permission, but if it is a malicious program is also needs to be installed at the administrator level. People would also have to right click the installer and manually choose to run it as an Administrator. The program will install no matter what after clicking yes to the UAC prompt, but it will not run properly unless it is installed and ran as an administrator. That is the benifit of UAC, it prompts for approval and then won't run correctly without being ran as an Administrator. The malicious program may even cause a run prompt every time you turn on your computer.

Update, Windows defender seems to also block unknown programs, and you always have to unblock them on every startup, even though they are running as an Administrator.

FWI....I can't say everything I say here is bullet proof. All I can say is that I'm noticing the functionallity of how programs are delt with that require admin aproval and how Windows Defender helps allong side UAC in terms that protect us.

Well... in order for them to be saved, they'd need to refuse permissions to an application. So I think they'd know that they denied an application access, and would likely only do that if they thought there was a risk.

Not necessarily. Many exploits will simply flat out fail without showing you a single prompt, because the process they're contained in is being constrained by the integrity level launched at, because of UAC.

Not necessarily. Many exploits will simply flat out fail without showing you a single prompt, because the process they're contained in is being constrained by the integrity level launched at, because of UAC.

Not sure what you mean. As a Linux user, I see a slightly different privilege escalation scheme. In *.nix, privileges are typically elevated ahead of operation (though some apps allow post-execution elevation, let's not get into all the varieties, and stick with the typical). UAC seems designed all around the ability to elevate at any time. If you drag items around your C:/Windows folder in your explorer, you are given a "Cancel or Allow" type prompt, right? This allows you to initiate the event, and click to allow. Convenient.

In Linux, if I tried to drag items around in my /bin, I would not be given the ability to elevate at that time. The action would simply be forbidden. I like it, because a user ought to be thinking about his tasks, using forethought. But truth is, it is just a different philosophy behind the same escalation mechanisms yielding a slightly different implementation.

So, would not an exploit, running as the default user in Windows merely prompt to elevate, as the system isn't able to tell if the user wants the task to run or not? Or am I missing some way that Windows tries to differentiate between whether the user wants a task to run or not?

Not sure what you mean. As a Linux user, I see a slightly different privilege escalation scheme. In *.nix, privileges are typically elevated ahead of operation (though some apps allow post-execution elevation, let's not get into all the varieties, and stick with the typical). UAC seems designed all around the ability to elevate at any time. If you drag items around your C:/Windows folder in your explorer, you are given a "Cancel or Allow" type prompt, right? This allows you to initiate the event, and click to allow. Convenient.

In Linux, if I tried to drag items around in my /bin, I would not be given the ability to elevate at that time. The action would simply be forbidden. I like it, because a user ought to be thinking about his tasks, using forethought. But truth is, it is just a different philosophy behind the same escalation mechanisms yielding a slightly different implementation.

So, would not an exploit, running as the default user in Windows merely prompt to elevate, as the system isn't able to tell if the user wants the task to run or not? Or am I missing some way that Windows tries to differentiate between whether the user wants a task to run or not?

If a prompt just comes out of nowhere that should be suspicious enough in itself and you should hit cancel.

If a prompt just comes out of nowhere that should be suspicious enough in itself and you should hit cancel.
Oh, I would. Not sure that everyone would. :p You know, the old social issue with PEBKAC
Not sure what you mean. As a Linux user, I see a slightly different privilege escalation scheme. In *.nix, privileges are typically elevated ahead of operation (though some apps allow post-execution elevation, let's not get into all the varieties, and stick with the typical). UAC seems designed all around the ability to elevate at any time. If you drag items around your C:/Windows folder in your explorer, you are given a "Cancel or Allow" type prompt, right? This allows you to initiate the event, and click to allow. Convenient.

Explorer is spawning another elevated process to perform that operation. Once a process is spawned, its IL cannot be changed. The only way it can do "Admin" tasks is by spawning another, elevated, process to do them for it.

It's just a convenient feature in explorer, not really UAC itself. VMWare does the same thing: When you want to configure something that requires Admin privileges, it spawns another little helper process to take care of the operation, which gives you a UAC prompt.

If an exploit is something like redirecting the output of a program, and overwriting some data (Like a critical system file), then you're perfectly safe, UAC will contain it.

You'd need arbitrary code execution or the ability to spawn another process to trigger a UAC prompt from a hijacked process.

The action would simply be forbidden.

And if you tried to perform the operation from an un-elevated command prompt, or another filemanager, you'd simply get an "Access Denied" error there.

Edited by MioTheGreat

^^^ Thanks, Mio. I wasn't quite understanding the Microsoft implementation, and your explanation of Explorer spawning a separate task with its own level makes a lot of sense. It only appears to allow elevation after-the-fact because it is already pre-leveled to allow, but prompts. Sounds like an app in an email attachment or such would not be subjected to the pre-elevated spawned separate task that an explorer item is, and would similarly just fail on Vista or *nix.

Sounds like an app in an email attachment or such would not be subjected to the pre-elevated spawned separate task that an explorer item is, and would similarly just fail on Vista or *nix.

Well, binaries can be signed with a manifest that requests that it always be launched with Administrative privileges. If such a binary is sent in an email, you'll get a prompt when you try to run the attachment.

If it's something like screwing with a preview handler in your email application, then it'll be contained by the lower privileges of the email client.

^^^ Thanks, Mio. I wasn't quite understanding the Microsoft implementation, and your explanation of Explorer spawning a separate task with its own level makes a lot of sense. It only appears to allow elevation after-the-fact because it is already pre-leveled to allow, but prompts. Sounds like an app in an email attachment or such would not be subjected to the pre-elevated spawned separate task that an explorer item is, and would similarly just fail on Vista or *nix.

Nothing is pre-elevated. When you copy a file into a directory that only has a write permission for the Administrator group, Explorer gets an "Access Denied" error. Internally it swallows that error and offers to try again with Admin privileges, which results in Explorer launching a new process with Admin privileges (more specifically, I believe it's an out-of-proc COM activation). It is that new process that requests to be started with Admin privileges and thus UAC prompts you for consent/credentials in order to allow it to run.

The system isn't all that different from what you described on *nix systems. Many apps or system components simply delegate their admin tasks to separate processes, while working to maintain an integrated experience (and not having to relaunch the original app, etc).

I have UAC disabled and haven't experienced any problems. I have it disabled because some of the applications I need demanded it and I never saw the need to turn it back on. I don't dispute its functionality but I simply don't appreciate multiple click-throughs to create folders - trying to sort my start menu in folders was a nightmare. I don't like the way the screen is dimmed in secure mode; it's not that it looks bad but the delay is noticeable. I also find the information provided by the prompts to be quite vague, meaning I'm likely to just click through them anyway. I'm not one of those users that pretend they're superior to others and I run anti-virus to protect against most threats. I like the idea of UAC, I just don't like the implementation.

It would also be nice if UAC didn't require a restart to enable / disable. I don't care to know the technical reasons for it but there must be a way to shutdown the necessary components without requiring a full restart.

Well... in order for them to be saved, they'd need to refuse permissions to an application. So I think they'd know that they denied an application access, and would likely only do that if they thought there was a risk.

A common misconception, but entirely false.

If someone attacks an exploit in Outlook by sending you a mail message that attempts a buffer overflow, and then they are able to inject code into Outlook that tries to modify system files, some or all of their code will fail.

That's because Outlook is already running at the "medium" integrity level (ie. non-admin level), and once Outlook has been started this integrity level cannot be changed. Now, if the code tried to launch something else with admin rights, you might see a dialog come out of nowhere and have to click "no" to be saved. But in many cases the exploit won't do that, or won't be able to do that, and will simply fail.

Even more useful is the existance of the "low" integrity level, which is used by Internet Explorer in Protected Mode, along with other processes like prevhost.exe (which Explorer uses to host previewers that may load untrusted content).

In low-integrity mode, there is no elevation path at all, so they CANNOT make an elevation prompt get displayed*. They're also much, much more restricted, and while an attack could still do harm by reading your data, it could not delete or corrupt anything, even things in your Documents folder and what not.

* = An application, like IE, can actually provide its own mechanism to "elevate" something out of Low IL by using a broker process like ieuser.exe.

I don't care to know the technical reasons for it but there must be a way to shutdown the necessary components without requiring a full restart.

Every process running has to be restarted to truly disable it. Otherwise, they're still running with a Medium IL.

It depends on what you mean by "disable." You can effectively disable UAC, but in a much more secure way, by enabling the auto-elevation policy. This still provides the exact same experience for Low IL processes like IE in Protected Mode, prevhost, etc. But it makes elevation from medium -> high IL always automatic if it's asked for.

On the other hand, if you use the checkbox "big switch" method to totally turn off UAC, you have to reboot because it completely changes the way everything in the system works, and every process needs to be restarted with the full user token, instead of the "split token" that UAC provides.

brandon, please tell me that auto elevation "silent mode" is going to be made avaliable as an option in the user interface in windows 7.

the biggest problem with UAC in vista isn't the implementation itself but the fact that many people are turing it off because they aren't given the option to turn on silent mode at that point.

  • 1 month later...
I agree that silent mode should be visibly available in the options, or perhaps the "Off" option in windows 7 should be silent mode. A much better alternative to people turning it off.

I completely agree.

It's scary the amount of people (even those working in the IT field) who just turn UAC off without any idea of what it actually controls. The reality is the majority of software will work just fine with UAC in Silent Mode (or fully on) and the user will be none the wiser, and not try to disable it.

Like I always say, if the UAC elevation prompts p*ss you off, grab TweakUAC and switch UAC to quiet mode.

where do you ppls find these 1-function apps?

MzVistaforce can do that... and almost everything else...

[edit]

and... I do not see that it offers any security.

UAC on or off, I get no viruses :p (avira antivir)

I'm suprised people take such a simple view of UAC, it is far from just a simple bunch of settings to slow down users. Even more suprising is that anyone turns it off, as the prompts go away once you get your machine set up properly and tweak a few things. Outside of RealTemp and eVGA precision (which I only run once in a while to do spot checks) and the Transcender test engine (which is really a result of the copy protection Transcender uses not being fully tweaked for Vista) I rarely see a UAC prompt. And when I do see one I don't mind taking 5 seconds to think about what I'm doing and what the app is asking to do.

One of the reasons we haven't seen a bunch of security issues with Vista is UAC/Secure Desktop/Broker Processes/Secure Mode IE have made it much harder to script exploits and drive-bys.

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

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Posts

    • Microsoft releases major feature updates for stock Windows 11 apps by Taras Buria In addition to releasing new Windows 11 preview builds, Microsoft announced that inbox Windows apps now have dedicated release notes in the official documentation. At long last, users have access to all the release notes for each app, with changes listed in chronological order. Microsoft used to announce feature updates for stock apps with each build. Now, with Windows Insider release notes hosted on the Microsoft Learn website, each app has a dedicated space for its changelog, which is very useful for those who want to track new features and improvements. Alongside that, Microsoft dropped massive feature updates for six stock apps: Clock, Media Player, Calculator, Voice Recorder, Photos, and Paint. Each app packs quite a lot of changes and new capabilities, so here are the release notes. Here are quick notes so that you can jump to the app you are interested in the most: Calculator Camera Clock Media Player Paint Photos Sound Recorder Here is what is new for the Calculator in version 11.2605.9.0: More accurate square-root results — Fixed rare cases where a calculation that should equal zero (like sqrt(2.25) - 1.5) returned a tiny leftover value instead. Readable text in High Contrast themes — Settings text now shows the correct colors in the High Contrast Aquatic and Desert themes. Fixed layout for right-to-left languages — For languages like Arabic and Hebrew, the graph, number pad, equation fields, and scroll buttons now appear correctly oriented. Reliable launch after upgrading — Fixed an issue where upgrading from much older versions could leave outdated settings that stopped the app from opening. Here is what is new for the Camera app (version 2026.2605.7.0): Zoom slider works on more cameras — The zoom slider now works on the latest cameras, respects your system zoom settings, and updates instantly when you change those settings. Full range of zoom levels — Fixed an issue where the zoom slider only showed three steps on some devices that zoom in finer increments. Front camera works on more devices — Resolved a problem that blocked the front-facing camera on certain wide-angle devices. More video resolution choices — You can now pick video resolutions that were previously hidden; the app shows a heads-up warning instead of removing them. QR links you can still use — When a scanned QR code points to something with no matching app, the link is now copied to your clipboard (with a notification) while still offering a Store search. Smarter default settings — When you haven't set a preference, the app now follows your system settings by default. The Clock app has a massive changelog with the following improvements in version 11.2605.9.0: Timers keep counting after they hit zero — When a timer runs out, it now keeps counting up (for example, -00:27:31) so you can see how far past the time you've gone. You can turn off the daily goal — Focus Sessions now include an "Off" option so you can skip setting a daily goal entirely. New 15-minute snooze option — Alarms now offer a 15-minute snooze interval. Run up to 3 countdowns at once — The Countdown Widget now supports three simultaneous countdowns, up from two. Timer Widget notifications now appear — Fixed an issue where the "timer finished" notification didn't show when the timer was started from the widget. Less clutter in Focus Sessions — Tasks you've already completed no longer show up in the Focus Session task list. More accurate focus progress — Fixed a rounding issue that could show your daily focus progress as a minute short (for example, 49 minutes instead of 50). Smoother World Clock comparisons — The World Clock compare page now loads dates as you scroll, so it feels more responsive. Up-to-date World Clock locations — Refreshed country and city names to match their current names. Correct sun and moon icons during midnight sun — Fixed an icon that wrongly showed a moon during all-day daylight in polar regions. Fixed back-button behavior in clock comparisons — Pressing back once now takes you back as expected, instead of jumping the date to 1926. Corrected the Newfoundland time zone — Newfoundland now uses the right time zone (St. John's). Disabled alarms stay looking disabled — Editing a turned-off alarm no longer makes it appear turned on. Cleaner timer cards — The expand button is now turned off on timer cards that have no time set, preventing actions that wouldn't do anything. Clearer theme setting — Updated the wording to "Choose your preferred app theme." Smoother Settings links — The "About" links in Settings no longer trigger an unexpected "switch apps" prompt. Fixed spacing in Spotify settings — Corrected uneven spacing in the Spotify settings card. Better focus visibility in High Contrast — The focus highlight in World Clock is now clearly visible in the High Contrast Aquatic and Desert themes. No more double announcements — Screen readers no longer read the timer value twice. Countdown names read correctly — Screen readers now properly announce the name of each countdown. Keyboard focus stays put — Focus no longer disappears after you press the Timer Reset button. Clearer alarm toggle for screen readers — Tidied up how the alarm on/off switch is announced. The Media Player app received plenty of changes as well (version 11.2605.14.0): Custom captions — You can now personalize how closed captions appear, with caption styling tied to your Windows caption settings, plus a quick link to open those settings directly. "Indexing" banner in the play queue — When your media library is still being scanned, a banner now explains why some items may not appear yet. Fixed the look of selected items — Corrected a layout glitch with selected items in lists. Fewer playback failures — Improved how the app recognizes supported file types, so more files play without issues. Playlists need a name — You can no longer accidentally save a playlist with a blank name. Cleaner look for empty playlists — Improved how a playlist appears when it has no items yet. More stable play queue edits — Fixed a crash that could happen when changing the play queue while the app was switching between sessions. Clearer "missing codec" message — Improved the dialog that appears when a file needs a codec you don't have, with clearer guidance on what to do. A big update is also available for Paint in version 11.2605.61.0: Adjustable eraser transparency — You can now control how transparent the eraser is. Cleaner stamp brush strokes — Fixed visible color shifts and artifacts when using stamp-style brushes. JPEG photos save in place — Opening a rotated JPEG and pressing Save now overwrites the original instead of unexpectedly prompting "Save As." No more crash on bad image files — Opening a damaged or invalid image, from within the app, by double click, or commandline, now shows a clear error message instead of closing the app. Classic selection behavior restored — The selection outline now hides while you move, resize, or rotate a selection, just like in classic Paint. Tidier AI image panel — Fixed missing spacing at the bottom of the AI image generation panel for a cleaner layout. Visible button hover in light theme — Toolbar split buttons now show a clear hover highlight in the light theme. Snappier toolbar — Streamlined how the ribbon lays out, giving a small speed boost at startup. Fewer background crashes — Fixed a crash that could happen while background tasks were finishing up. Stable app shutdown — Prevented rare crashes when closing the app. Fixed layer removal glitch — Deleting the active layer no longer leaves the layers list in an inconsistent state. Here is what is new in the Photos app (version 2026.11060.2004.0): AI watermarking — AI-generated or edited images can now carry a visible Copilot watermark. You choose Never, Always, or Ask Every Time in Settings, with a confirmation when saving. The watermarking is off by default in settings. Better viewing of small images and pixel art — Tiny images (like 16×16 pixel art) now zoom in far more to fill the screen and stay crisp instead of looking blurry. Select scanned text with the keyboard — When text is detected in an image, you can now navigate and select it using the arrow keys, Shift+Arrow, Home/End, and Ctrl+A, with a clear focus highlight. Fixed a crash in text recognition — Resolved a crash that could close Photos while detecting text in images; the app now recovers gracefully. Easier keyboard navigation — Tabbing through the navigation bar no longer stops on hidden controls, so it takes a single Tab to move past it instead of three. And finally, here is the Sound Recorder (version 11.2605.1.0): Waveform shows with Bluetooth mics — The live waveform now displays correctly when you record using a Bluetooth audio device. No more stray scrollbar — A non-working horizontal scrollbar no longer appears at the bottom of the waveform unless you've zoomed in. Mark button ready right away — The Mark button no longer looks grayed out until you hover over it after opening the app. Markers hidden for WAV files — Markers are now turned off for WAV recordings, since that format can't store them — so they're no longer lost silently. Smoother deleting — Quickly pressing Delete and Enter to remove several recordings in a row no longer triggers a "file doesn't exist" error. Fixed a memory issue — Resolved a memory leak that occurred each time a recording started. You can find all these changelogs in the official documentation here.
    • again, an article about Microsoft Edge and ridicules hater's comments
    • From this very same article: "For organizations that prefer a “more deliberate pace”, the Extended Stable channel remains an option."
    • Or every other browser, because they all behave the same, at least the mainstream ones. Firefox does exactly the same: background updates, restart to install them. Haters gotta hate, I guess.
  • Recent Achievements

    • Very Popular
      AndrewSteel earned a badge
      Very Popular
    • Veteran
      Taliseian went up a rank
      Veteran
    • One Month Later
      Clizby earned a badge
      One Month Later
    • One Month Later
      Timaximus earned a badge
      One Month Later
    • Week One Done
      Timaximus earned a badge
      Week One Done
  • Popular Contributors

    1. 1
      +primortal
      495
    2. 2
      PsYcHoKiLLa
      166
    3. 3
      +Edouard
      162
    4. 4
      Steven P.
      86
    5. 5
      ATLien_0
      77
  • Tell a friend

    Love Neowin? Tell a friend!