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| Guest | Administrator - less secure? I'm happy with UAC, and unlike most people don't object to Windows telling me when something potentially risky is about to happen. However, at the moment I've set my account up as an Administrator so I don't have to type the admin password into the UAC prompt each time. Are there any security risks doing this? I seem to think that even Administrator level accounts run in non-Administrator mode most of the time, which is why I thought it would be OK. Thanks, Steve |
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| Guest | Re: Administrator - less secure? Steve Thackery wrote: > I'm happy with UAC, and unlike most people don't object to Windows telling > me when something potentially risky is about to happen. > > However, at the moment I've set my account up as an Administrator so I don't > have to type the admin password into the UAC prompt each time. > > Are there any security risks doing this? I seem to think that even > Administrator level accounts run in non-Administrator mode most of the time, > which is why I thought it would be OK. > > Thanks, > > Steve > > Routinely using a computer with administrative privileges is not without some risk. You will be more susceptible to some types of malware, particularly adware and spyware. While using a computer with limited privileges isn't the cure-all, silver bullet that some claim it to be, any experienced IT professional will verify that doing so definitely reduces that amount of damage and depth of penetration by the malware. If you get infected/infested while running as an administrator, the odds are much greater that any malware will be extremely difficult, if not impossible, to remove with formating the hard drive and starting anew. The intruding malware will have the same privileges to all of the files on your hard drive that you do. Vista's UAC adds an additional layer of protection, even if you don't enter a password each time it warns you; the important thing is that you're being warned, and can then make your own decision. A technically competent user who is aware of the risks and knows how to take proper precautions can usually safely operate with administrative privileges; I do so myself. But I certainly don't recommend it for the average computer user. -- Bruce Chambers Help us help you: http://dts-l.org/goodpost.htm http://www.catb.org/~esr/faqs/smart-questions.html They that can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety. -Benjamin Franklin Many people would rather die than think; in fact, most do. -Bertrand Russell |
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| Guest | Re: Administrator - less secure? Thanks for those comments, Bruce. But is the Administrator account *really* running with administrative privileges in Vista? I thought the administrative privileges were switched off, so in effect even an Administrator runs as a normal user until a UAC prompt comes along. Or is there more to it than that? Sorry for being a bit thick! Steve |
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| | #4 (permalink) |
| Guest | Re: Administrator - less secure? Hello, An administrator account in Vista is essentially an "admin user on demand" at program-level granularity. So, programs that do not prompt are semantically running in a standard user account, while programs that do prompt are running with all the privileges assigned to your admin account. However, when logged in as an administrator, both admin programs and non-admin programs are running inside of your admin user profile. There are not really two different accounts here, it is just pretend. This is different than when logged in as a standard user. When logged in as a standard user, programs that don't need admin power run inside of your standard user profile. However, when you run an admin program from inside a standard user account, the admin program is running inside the profile of the admin user account that you authenticated with in the credentials prompt. This makes running as a standard user and elevating-on-demand to a seperate administrator account more secure, since the profiles are seperated (this can prevent certain types of attacks). Also, this extra seperation can cause progam compatability issues as well, although UAC does try to mitigate these as best as possible. It's hard to say how much extra security you get from running in a standard user vs. administrator on vista this early in the game. -- -JB Microsoft MVP - Windows Shell Windows Vista Support FAQ - http://www.jimmah.com/vista/ On Wed, 16 May 2007 09:16:29 +0100, "Steve Thackery" <thack@nowhere.net> wrote: >I'm happy with UAC, and unlike most people don't object to Windows telling >me when something potentially risky is about to happen. > >However, at the moment I've set my account up as an Administrator so I don't >have to type the admin password into the UAC prompt each time. > >Are there any security risks doing this? I seem to think that even >Administrator level accounts run in non-Administrator mode most of the time, >which is why I thought it would be OK. > >Thanks, > >Steve > |
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| | #5 (permalink) |
| Guest | Re: Administrator - less secure? Steve Thackery wrote: > Thanks for those comments, Bruce. > > But is the Administrator account *really* running with administrative > privileges in Vista? I thought the administrative privileges were switched > off, so in effect even an Administrator runs as a normal user until a UAC > prompt comes along. > I don't know if administrative privileges are entirely "switched off," but they're most definitely "toned down" until elevated in response to a UAC prompt, so the affect is - as near as I've been able to determine so far - the same. > Or is there more to it than that? > No, I don't think so. I suspect we've more of a semantics issue than anything else. -- Bruce Chambers Help us help you: http://dts-l.org/goodpost.htm http://www.catb.org/~esr/faqs/smart-questions.html They that can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety. -Benjamin Franklin Many people would rather die than think; in fact, most do. -Bertrand Russell |
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| | #6 (permalink) |
| Guest | Re: Administrator - less secure? Excellent replies, and very helpful. Thanks, guys. Steve |
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