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#21
Barman58 post #18
No system is immune from it's user
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boohbah post #19
want really saying i wasn't confident however i think it is a good safeguard for overconfidence and in special cases, arrogance
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Barman58 post #18
No system is immune from it's user
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boohbah post #19
want really saying i wasn't confident however i think it is a good safeguard for overconfidence and in special cases, arrogance
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I agree with all three of you. Sure, UAC is as annoying as an itch on the bottom of your foot while wearing laced boots but it doesn't take but a second to click on YES when I get the popup, even when the stupid thing first pops up on the task bar. I keep it set for the highest level protection on both of my machines so it will notify me if something or someone tries to open a program without my knowlege and blocks it until I have the chance to say yea or nay.
I'll leave it as it is. I just thought there might be a quick way to allow certain programs.
an option to simply right click would defeat the original purpose of the UAC, it has to be difficult to circumvent to prevent the possible use of any workaround by malware. Any opt out would need this to be logged somewhere on the system which would mean this table could be potentially used by said malware.
The option given is however suitably secure to work around those occasions that require a protected piece of code to be run unattended at startup and such :)
I haven't had any problems, and I've had it disabled since July of 2009 when I began using the official Release Candidate of Windows 7.
I really don't do anything with my computer that puts it at risk because I know what to avoid. I don't even have any anti-virus or anti-malware software installed. Yes, I have no security software installed and I even have Windows firewall disabled. I had Windows XP before Windows 7 ever since 2001 and I spent that entire time without any security software installed of any kind and I had no problems back then either.
The only time I ever got a virus was way back in the very late 90s (perhaps it was even '99 or 2000) because I was using peer-to-peer software such as KaZaA Lite K++ and then eventually Limewire. I was also looking around on the internet for the same kind of stuff that I wanted to find using KaZaA and Limewire. I downloaded lots of things for free that most people were paying lots of money for and I was also downloading lots of porn (hey, I was a horny young man). Unfortunately, that caused me to get a virus. I discovered it the hard way and I was fortunate enough to save my system.
A year or two later I "cleaned up my act" and I stopped doing that. I believe that was around the year 2001 or 2002 because it was shortly after I bought Windows XP. I didn't install any security software or any kind because I didn't like the way it slowed down my system. I also believed that I didn't need it because I was no longer doing that illegal and risky downloading. It turned out that I was right because I haven't had any problems since I stopped doing that.
You've either been extremely lucky or you've been infected and just don't know it since you have no way of checking for it if the infection is working quietly in the background. It's your computer and if you want to gamble with your security, go for it. I prefer to take a safer route and in no way could I ever responsibly recommend to anyone to go your route.