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adminfoo.net
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adminfoo.net
Resources for the seasoned system administrator
2008/01/28
In Defense of UAC
This is me, editorializing - not an activity I prefer to use this blog for. But occasionally something seems so nonsensical to me that I just have to speak up. And today it's UAC that has me speaking up. I'm greatly disappointed by the number of true techies and semi-techies who have gone into a sort of 'hate UAC' mode. I understand their frustrations; UAC can slow down routine sysadmin activities and break into the flow of your day. But, like seatbelts in a car, it's one of those things that seems like a terrible imposition at first, then just blends into your routine to the point where you hardly think about it. You buckle up and you're safer because you did it. I was one of those guys who hated seatbelt laws when they first appeared. But I got used to it, and now that I've survived a rollover accident because of a seatbelt, I'm pretty glad I did! I've been running Windows systems according to the least privilege principle ever since Windows NT 4. I call this nonadmin because it's less of a mouthful. And I've been forcing users to do it, and begging my co-administrators to do it, since 1996. But I can't lie: nonadmin was a huge pain in the NT4/W2000/XP/W2003 days; the RunAs utility was a major PITA . You had to use special workarounds to elevate essential Windows tools like the file Explorer. There were a great many programs which didn't work well (or at all!) in a nonadmin context. Running nonadmin was doable ... but only with great self discipline, and a fair amount of pain as you worked through the changes in habits and gained the knowledge required to get it done. In a corporate setting, it is possible for the administrator to do all the work and leave the regular office users blissfully unaware of the fact that they are nonadmin. But when you're the adminis"
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