• @lightnegative@lemmy.world
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    187 months ago

    I turn UAC off before it nags me for the 10th time.

    The only nag I want to see is the one right before it gets turned off.

    I hate things that just throw up nag screens that users get desensitized to and just click through anyway. It hasn’t increased security at all.

    Looking at you “do you trust the authors of the code in this workspace folder” VSCode. Yes I effing do, that’s why I opened it to begin with!

      • Eager Eagle
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        87 months ago

        It’s still a valid complain, but the problem is not exactly the presence or absence of a confirmation IMO, it’s a deeper matter.

        What causes user desensitization (I guess that’s a word) is a direct result of how Windows users traditionally install software - from untrusted sources or by downloading them directly from a vendor’s website then manually installing it.

        UAC would be just fine if it was a rare thing to see, but because of this “download a .exe > double click > install” flow users see it all the time, which defeats the purpose of the warning. It became just another half-measure Windows has implemented.

        • @Buddahriffic@lemmy.world
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          27 months ago

          And it’s unhelpful because it doesn’t give any details about what it wants to do with that admin access and also treats permission for one action as permission for all actions (not that you can tell what they first action you’re permitting is).

          I like the way android does it, where you can grant or revoke special permissions by category of action.

          Though the system I’d like to see is one where each program is sandboxed and then even you close the program (or it prompts for an elevation), then you get a list of system differences between the sandbox and your system and can choose whether and which changes to push from the sandbox env into the main env. Or to combine sandboxes so that programs can interact with each other.