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May 3rd, 2006

A fresh look at Vista's User Account Control, Part 2

Posted by Ed Bott @ 6:59 pm

Categories: Security, Windows Vista

Tags:

[Update May 5, 2006 1:35pm PDTA portion of this post was accidentally deleted on May 4 due to a production error. The text has now been restored and can be seen here. – Ed Bott.]

In the first post in this series, I provided a close-up look at a major new security feature in Windows Vista. User Account Control (UAC), which will be enabled by default in all versions of Windows Vista, monitors a user’s actions and prompts for an administrator’s credentials before allowing any action that has a potential impact on system security.

The UAC prompts I depicted in the first post are those that appear when you install a program, when you run a program that requires access to sensitive locations, or when you configure a Windows setting that affects all users. But as many beta testers have discovered, UAC prompts can also show up when you perform seemingly innocent file operations on drives formatted using NTFS.

In this post, I explain why these prompts appear and why some so-called Windows experts miss the obvious reason (and the obvious fix).

File operations trigger a UAC prompt anytime you try to do something with a file or folder where your current set of user rights doesn’t grant that access. For example:

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Ed BottEd Bott is an award-winning technology writer with more than two decades' experience writing for mainstream media outlets and online publications. See his full profile and disclosure of his industry affiliations.

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  • Talkback
  • Most Recent of 26 Talkback(s)
Implementation
It's not what they are doing, it's how they are doing it. In typical Microsoft fashion, they are making it much more complicated than it needs to be.

Why all the clicks? Take a cue from OS X. W... (Read the rest)
Posted by: baggins_z Posted on: 05/17/06 You are currently: a Guest | | Terms of Use
The only real solution  toadlife | 05/03/06
Amen!  Patrick Jones | 05/04/06
Requiring admin rights to install isn't my gripe  toadlife | 05/04/06
Some are like that, too  Patrick Jones | 05/04/06
Memory lane.....  pkr@... | 05/08/06
So what's the problem?  Cardinal_Bill | 05/04/06
Read more carefully, Bill  Ed BottZDNet Moderator | 05/04/06
Rights to external drives..  Patrick Jones | 05/04/06
How it works  toadlife | 05/04/06
Most external devices are formatted in FAT  zmud | 05/05/06
Not really...  Ed BottZDNet Moderator | 05/05/06
message somewhat vague ...  David A. Pimentel | 05/05/06
My mistake  Ed BottZDNet Moderator | 05/05/06
See the updated page  Ed BottZDNet Moderator | 05/05/06
Thank you ...  David A. Pimentel | 05/08/06
The problem is *not* the users  toadlife | 05/04/06
I agree for the most part  CobraA1 | 05/04/06
Use whatever you want - just use it properly  toadlife | 05/04/06
Exactly  Ed BottZDNet Moderator | 05/04/06
Users want backward compatibility.  HypnoToad72 | 05/05/06
Editing error, see the updates  Ed BottZDNet Moderator | 05/05/06
I'll cut MS some slack here ...  An_Axe_to_Grind | 05/04/06
Hah. grin [nt]  olePigeon | 05/05/06
Sounds just like UNIX permissions.  Twey | 05/05/06
You should have done some comparison  hopefulcoder | 05/07/06
Implementation  baggins_z | 05/17/06

What do you think?

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