Disable "Administrator Permission" Boxes???

A

A Baffled User

I am new to Vista (Home Premium) and am only now beginning to use the
desktop computer on which it is installed. I cannot believe the number of
times that a series of dialog boxes pop up informing me that I need to
provide administrator permission to perform a simple task. Like save a copy
of a file to my external hard drive. This is a waste of time! Plus, it's not
like these boxes provide any kind of protection. All I do is give myself
permission by clicking on Continue or whatever.

I am the only person who uses the Vista computer and the laptop that is
networked to it. Is there a way to disable these annoying permission boxes?

Thanks!

Joan
 
T

Tom Allen

snip
Plus, it's not like these boxes provide any kind of protection. All I
do is give myself permission by clicking on Continue or whatever.
snip

It's not asking if you really meant it, it's asking if it was you that
did it.
The protection is that you are confirming that a potentially insecure
action was started by you the user and not by some piece of malicious
software. At least that's the theory as I understand it :)

You can have security or you can have convenience but seldom both - it's
your choice.
In the course of normal work I no longer see UAC, only when I'm
tinkering.

Regards
Tom



Tom
 
T

The poster fromerly known as 'The Poster Formerly

A said:
I am new to Vista (Home Premium) and am only now beginning to use the
desktop computer on which it is installed. I cannot believe the number of
times that a series of dialog boxes pop up informing me that I need to
provide administrator permission to perform a simple task. Like save a copy
of a file to my external hard drive. This is a waste of time! Plus, it's not
like these boxes provide any kind of protection. All I do is give myself
permission by clicking on Continue or whatever.

I am the only person who uses the Vista computer and the laptop that is
networked to it. Is there a way to disable these annoying permission boxes?

Thanks!

Joan

This 'feature' is called UAC. In order to disable it, click start orb,
click in search, type 'msconfig', hit enter key, Click on 'Tools' tab,
then scroll down until you find 'Disable UAC', click on it to highlight
it, then click the launch button. OK out and reboot.

--
"Fair use is not merely a nice concept--it is a federal law based on
free speech rights under the First Amendment and is a cornerstone of the
creativity and innovation that is a hallmark of this country. Consumer
rights in the digital age are not frivolous."
- Maura Corbett
 
S

Synapse Syndrome

A Baffled User said:
I am new to Vista (Home Premium) and am only now beginning to use the
desktop computer on which it is installed. I cannot believe the number of
times that a series of dialog boxes pop up informing me that I need to
provide administrator permission to perform a simple task. Like save a copy
of a file to my external hard drive. This is a waste of time! Plus, it's
not like these boxes provide any kind of protection. All I do is give
myself permission by clicking on Continue or whatever.

I am the only person who uses the Vista computer and the laptop that is
networked to it. Is there a way to disable these annoying permission
boxes?


Don't disable UAC. If you do that you will allow viruses to write to system
folders, unless you do not run as Admin, as you were always supposed to with
2000/XP. People who never knew what they were doing always ran XP as Admin,
and got loads of malware, so now everybody has to endure this damn UAC.

UAC does make your computer much more secure, and you can have most of the
benefits, including IE7 Protected Mode, without the annoying prompts but
doing one of these:

I do this:

http://www.tweakvista.eu/show_tweak.php?tweak=84

Only works on Ultimate, Enterprise and Business editions)

If you have Home Basic/Premium, you can use this, for the same effect:

www.tweak-uac.com/

This page also explains the benefits of not disabling UAC, but disabling the
prompts.

ss.
 
P

Paul Smith

A Baffled User said:
I am new to Vista (Home Premium) and am only now beginning to use the
desktop computer on which it is installed. I cannot believe the number of
times that a series of dialog boxes pop up informing me that I need to
provide administrator permission to perform a simple task. Like save a copy
of a file to my external hard drive. This is a waste of time! Plus, it's
not like these boxes provide any kind of protection. All I do is give
myself permission by clicking on Continue or whatever.

I am the only person who uses the Vista computer and the laptop that is
networked to it. Is there a way to disable these annoying permission
boxes?

Instead of doing what so many have suggested, in disabling or putting UAC in
silent mode.

Why not change the permissions on the locations you're writing to so they
are user-writable? Explorer shouldn't need to be elevated to write to an
external drive. So right-click on it, go to properties -> security and give
your user (the permissions level Explorer runs in without elevating), and
give it full control.

--
Paul Smith,
Yeovil, UK.
Microsoft MVP Windows Shell/User.
http://www.dasmirnov.net/blog/
http://www.windowsresource.net/

*Remove nospam. to reply by e-mail*
 
S

Synapse Syndrome

Paul Smith said:
Instead of doing what so many have suggested, in disabling or putting UAC
in silent mode.

Why not change the permissions on the locations you're writing to so they
are user-writable? Explorer shouldn't need to be elevated to write to an
external drive. So right-click on it, go to properties -> security and
give your user (the permissions level Explorer runs in without elevating),
and give it full control.

I missed the bit about him writing to an external drive without the required
NTFS permissions. I have found that this is a big annoyance, even with
people I would have expected to know what they doing.

ss.
 
A

A Baffled User

Tom Allen said:
snip
snip

It's not asking if you really meant it, it's asking if it was you that did
it.
The protection is that you are confirming that a potentially insecure
action was started by you the user and not by some piece of malicious
software. At least that's the theory as I understand it :)

You can have security or you can have convenience but seldom both - it's
your choice.
In the course of normal work I no longer see UAC, only when I'm tinkering.

Regards
Tom



Tom

Well, I would not have minded if the permission boxes only appeared when I
was installing new software or hardware, for example. But when I'm simply
right-clicking a file under Save As in Word and then Send To my external
hard drive??? That would get really old fast!
 
A

A Baffled User

Synapse Syndrome said:
Don't disable UAC. If you do that you will allow viruses to write to
system folders, unless you do not run as Admin, as you were always
supposed to with 2000/XP. People who never knew what they were doing
always ran XP as Admin, and got loads of malware, so now everybody has to
endure this damn UAC.

UAC does make your computer much more secure, and you can have most of the
benefits, including IE7 Protected Mode, without the annoying prompts but
doing one of these:

I do this:

http://www.tweakvista.eu/show_tweak.php?tweak=84

Only works on Ultimate, Enterprise and Business editions)

If you have Home Basic/Premium, you can use this, for the same effect:

www.tweak-uac.com/

This page also explains the benefits of not disabling UAC, but disabling
the prompts.

ss.

Thanks, ss. As I wrote above, I could live with UAC if it only opened on
software or hardware installs, but it was coming on when I did nothing more
dangerous than save a file to my external hard drive. Is there a way to
disable UAC only for that one function (that I use dozens of times a day)?
 
A

A Baffled User

Paul Smith said:
Instead of doing what so many have suggested, in disabling or putting UAC
in silent mode.

Why not change the permissions on the locations you're writing to so they
are user-writable? Explorer shouldn't need to be elevated to write to an
external drive. So right-click on it, go to properties -> security and
give your user (the permissions level Explorer runs in without elevating),
and give it full control.

--
Paul Smith,
Yeovil, UK.
Microsoft MVP Windows Shell/User.
http://www.dasmirnov.net/blog/
http://www.windowsresource.net/

*Remove nospam. to reply by e-mail*

I think that what you are suggesting here sounds like what I should do. I
have done what you say, and there is a check mark next to Full Control next
to my username. Maybe I haven't really understood what you mean.

In any event, what I really need is a way to disable the UAC permission box
when backing up files created in MS Word. That's the program whose files I
want to back up most often.

Joan
 
S

Synapse Syndrome

A Baffled User said:
Thanks, ss. As I wrote above, I could live with UAC if it only opened on
software or hardware installs, but it was coming on when I did nothing
more dangerous than save a file to my external hard drive. Is there a way
to disable UAC only for that one function (that I use dozens of times a
day)?

Yes. Give your user account full NTFS access privileges on that drive.

ss.
 
S

Synapse Syndrome

Synapse Syndrome said:
Yes. Give your user account full NTFS access privileges on that drive.


Oops, I meant permissions, of course.

Right click the drive in Computer, Properties > Security tab.

ss.
 
A

A Baffled User

Synapse Syndrome said:
Oops, I meant permissions, of course.

Right click the drive in Computer, Properties > Security tab.

ss.
I went to that location, and Full Control is already checked under my
username.
 

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