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| Security and Windows Vista A forum for discussion on security issues with Windows Vista. (microsoft.public.windows.vista.security) |
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I think that when Vista first comes out many early adopters will turn off
UAC. I agree this is a shame but it is a reality. As new computers are purchased by people who are not early adopters but just average consumers buying a computer this may change. The vast majority of these people will not be able to figure out how to turn it off. They will phone their OEM supplier, software comany, or whomever they can find a phone number for for support when things don't work. Eventually this will cause companies to make their products work with UAC. It will probably take a few years. This has been the pattern in the past when new versions of Windows broke old applications and ways of doing things. It will most likely be the pattern for the future. There are still many "experts" who insist that Windows XP is crap, all anyone needs is Windows 98. -- Kerry MS-MVP Windows - Shell/User http://www.vistahelp.ca Jeff wrote: Jimmy, Back to the UAC issue. As you have been seeing;and as I discussed with you long ago; UAC is causing people grief;and their first tendency;in many cases;is to turn it off. Granted; a nice security feature; but when the initial reaction is one of frustration;which then causes users to disable it; it then becomes a moot point. UAC is;at that point; irrelevant. Sure;what people should do;and what actually happens;can be two completely different things. As you are aware;from our previous discussions;UAC can be a pain. I have heeded your advice; and learned to live with it. In fact;ran it for every build;until 5728. One noticeable difference;other than the obvious;the annoyance going away; is the freeing up of system resources. Running with UAC on/off shows a noticeable difference in my system. We shall see; I still think UAC will be abandoned;by lots of folks. A good idea;which I fear will go the way of XP;as in everyone running as admin. Jeff |
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Jimmy,
Back to the UAC issue. My favorite ![]() As you have been seeing;and as I discussed with you long ago; UAC is causing people grief;and their first tendency;in many cases;is to turn it off. Agreed. Granted; a nice security feature; but when the initial reaction is one of frustration;which then causes users to disable it; it then becomes a moot point. UAC is;at that point; irrelevant. I agree that the initial reaction is that of frustration; however, I don't agree that this causes all such frustrated users to turn it off. I think a majority of the people that post here regarding UAC are requesting information about it because they are frustrated by it and do not understand it... only a (strong, vocal) minority ask how to disable it without wanting to know anything about it. I feel this is a good sign ... it means people are seeing that it is more than just a nag screen, even if they don't really understand how it works. Hopefully, these people will find the information they need through whatever source to understand and effectively use UAC. Sure;what people should do;and what actually happens;can be two completely different things. Of course; the actions people take will vary through a wide spectrum. I believe that there will be small chunk of users who immediately turn it off, a small chunk that immediately understand it and live with, and a large chunk of users that only understand it to a certain point but don't turn it off. I think the challenge Microsoft faces is informing that large chunk of people what UAC is, how it benefits them, and how they should use it. As you are aware;from our previous discussions;UAC can be a pain. I have heeded your advice; and learned to live with it. In fact;ran it for every build;until 5728. One noticeable difference;other than the obvious;the annoyance going away; is the freeing up of system resources. Running with UAC on/off shows a noticeable difference in my system. Fascinating. I wonder why that is. We shall see; I still think UAC will be abandoned;by lots of folks. I think in relation to everyone using Vista, there will only be a small percentage overall of people who choose to turn it off, and I agree with Kerry that this percentage will decline and the effectiveness overall of UAC will increase dramatically as application vendors take advantage of it and the public becomes more informed about it. A good idea;which I fear will go the way of XP;as in everyone running as admin. I certainly hope not. It is a possibility; however, I think compared to other security initiatives that Microsoft has pushed that have failed to take hold, this one has a very good chance of success. -- - JB Windows Vista Support Faq http://www.jimmah.com/vista/ |
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Jimmy,
Back to the UAC issue. As you have been seeing;and as I discussed with you long ago; UAC is causing people grief;and their first tendency;in many cases;is to turn it off. Granted; a nice security feature; but when the initial reaction is one of frustration;which then causes users to disable it; it then becomes a moot point. UAC is;at that point; irrelevant. Sure;what people should do;and what actually happens;can be two completely different things. As you are aware;from our previous discussions;UAC can be a pain. I have heeded your advice; and learned to live with it. In fact;ran it for every build;until 5728. One noticeable difference;other than the obvious;the annoyance going away; is the freeing up of system resources. Running with UAC on/off shows a noticeable difference in my system. We shall see; I still think UAC will be abandoned;by lots of folks. A good idea;which I fear will go the way of XP;as in everyone running as admin. Jeff |
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Jeff wrote:
Jimmy, Back to the UAC issue. As you have been seeing;and as I discussed with you long ago; UAC is causing people grief;and their first tendency;in many cases;is to turn it off. Granted; a nice security feature; but when the initial reaction is one of frustration;which then causes users to disable it; it then becomes a moot point. UAC is;at that point; irrelevant. Well it's quite poorly implemented in comparison to similar features in Linux or Mac OSX so you could be right. However, it's nice to see Microsoft trying to do something, and of course if you turn it off and your PC gets rooted, they'll be in a good position to shrug and say "told you so". -- Robert Moir www.robertmoir.com |
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snip
Well it's quite poorly implemented in comparison to similar features in Linux or Mac OSX I'm going to have to disagree here ... I think the implementation is excellent. The problem is that of application compatability, something that OSX and Linux don't have to worry about. -- - JB Windows Vista Support Faq http://www.jimmah.com/vista/ |
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Well,
I give ya one thing Jimmy;you're persistent. Gotta like your effort. :-) Jeff "Jimmy Brush" wrote in message ... snip Well it's quite poorly implemented in comparison to similar features in Linux or Mac OSX I'm going to have to disagree here ... I think the implementation is excellent. The problem is that of application compatability, something that OSX and Linux don't have to worry about. -- - JB Windows Vista Support Faq http://www.jimmah.com/vista/ |
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And you're the one who started this discussion back up, too
![]() -- - JB Windows Vista Support Faq http://www.jimmah.com/vista/ |
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Umm,
Yup, I DID, didn't I? LOL Jeff :-) "Jimmy Brush" wrote in message ... And you're the one who started this discussion back up, too ![]() -- - JB Windows Vista Support Faq http://www.jimmah.com/vista/ |
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Jimmy Brush wrote:
snip Well it's quite poorly implemented in comparison to similar features in Linux or Mac OSX I'm going to have to disagree here ... I think the implementation is excellent. Maybe, maybe not. We'll have to agree to disagree, if you can agree to that ;-) The problem is that of application compatability, something that OSX and Linux don't have to worry about. Hmmm, I'm fairly sure that Mac and Linux users expect their apps to work, in fact I'm a Mac user some of the time and I'm certain I expect my Mac apps to run on my Mac laptop. With technologies like Rosetta and the BSD environment, I'd actually say apple have done a lot of work in that area actually. What I'm talking about is UAC as a direct comparison to how OS X and a modern Linux such as Ubuntu implement the 'sudo' command in the GUI. Much less intrusive than in Vista in my opinion, especially in OS X. Have you seen how that does it? -- Robert Moir www.robertmoir.com |
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