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different between uac admin and standard user
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different between uac admin and standard user
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different between uac admin and standard user |
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#1 |
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Guest
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Hi all,
earlier i workes with a standard user account and if i need administrator privilegs i logged on as an administrator directly or use runas to start the application as an administrator. I think this is the same security option like UAC. An administrator work under a standard user account and will be asked if he really want to be work as an administrator. I read some articles but i do not understand the big security story behind of uac. Many users have got problems with uac and search a way to disable it or they klick ok on the security question without thinking. Is this the right way? |
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#2 |
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UAC works like this. When a user logs on, they are just that, a user. As if
it were Windows XP and they were (rarely) not an admin account. The only thing is that the user account has the ability to become an admin account for a length of time. This is what UAC does. When a program is ran that requires you to be an admin (changes some system settings or something) UAC will usually detect it and prompt you to switch to being an admin just to run that program. The problem, however, is that since almost all home users of Windows XP were admins, program makers simply did not care about making their programs runnable on a user privledged account. That is why certain programs ask for admin. Some people don't see the security in this. Under XP, anything that you downloaded, ran, etc. was running as an administrator. Therefore, if you happened to get some spyware, adware, etc. it could access all setting, system files, etc. Now, anything that isn't a program you explicitly choose to run as an admin is not, therefore blocking those bad things I mentioned before from changing system settings or accessing system files. Like I said, many people don't understand the importance of it, how it will prompt you less as you use things more, how it will prompt you less as more Vista-Compatable programs come out, and how it secures their computer in a method that was started in the *nix OSes (and later copied by Mac.) All that those people see is the fact that they have to move their mouse to the "continue" button after reading a scentence. They feel that that is too much for them, so they break down and cannot handle how tough the job is. . Any more questions?"Marc Winston" <socratal@rubisole.net> wrote in message news:uO9MqeiXHHA.4520@TK2MSFTNGP06.phx.gbl... > Hi all, > > earlier i workes with a standard user account and if i need administrator > privilegs i logged on as an administrator directly or use runas to start > the application as an administrator. > I think this is the same security option like UAC. An administrator work > under a standard user account and will be asked if he really want > to be work as an administrator. > I read some articles but i do not understand the big security story behind > of uac. > Many users have got problems with uac and search a way to disable it or > they klick ok on the security question without thinking. Is this the right > way? |
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#3 |
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Guest
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Well done Marc. Also some things to consider:
1) Once you're done configuring the system, you'll rarely see UAC prompts. I can go days without seeing them. I only see them when I install an app or click a shielded item in Control Panel. 2) You can press Enter rather than click OK or Continue. 3) The whole point of being able to elevate from a Standard account is so that you don't have to log out then into an admin account to do one small thing. You can stay in your safer Standard account and just elevate on the fly. This is a well-know security best-practice that professionals have known about and followed for years. 4) If you don't password-protect the admin account, you won't need to enter the password every time you elevate from a standard account. Just hit Enter or click the button to proceed. You really only need to password-protect the admin account if you're using parental controls or some other means of preventing other users from having too much freedom on the system. Current thinking is that all systems should ship with widely-known and accepted security best practices already in place, whether users like it or not. Partly because professionals now consider trying to train users about security is a waste of time (this article "Security expert: User education is pointless" started quite the debate): http://news.zdnet.com/2100-1009_22-6125213.html But more so, it just makes sense to make security best practices the default setting. When Windows XP first shipped it had a built-in firewall. But it was off by default. So nobody knew about or turned it on. When the blaster and some of the other big worms hit, they took advantage of that ignorance and infected millions of computers. (All hackers prey on human ignorance more than anything else). Had the firewall just been turned on by default, those worms wouldn't have caused nearly so much damage. Microsoft knows good an well that the average end user if going to turn off UAC the moment they see the option or get someone to tell them how to do it. But, that's no reason to leave UAC out of an OS. Some people drive without seatbelts too. But that's no reason for car manufacturers to stop putting seatbelts in cars. "Marc Winston" <socratal@rubisole.net> wrote in message news:uO9MqeiXHHA.4520@TK2MSFTNGP06.phx.gbl... > Hi all, > > earlier i workes with a standard user account and if i need administrator > privilegs i logged on as an administrator directly or use runas to start > the application as an administrator. > I think this is the same security option like UAC. An administrator work > under a standard user account and will be asked if he really want > to be work as an administrator. > I read some articles but i do not understand the big security story behind > of uac. > Many users have got problems with uac and search a way to disable it or > they klick ok on the security question without thinking. Is this the right > way? |
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