http://www.news.com/Microsoft-Vista-feature-designed-to-annoy-users/2100-101 6_3-6237191.html?tag=nefd.top
SAN FRANCISCO--A Microsoft manager has said that one of the security features in Vista was deliberately designed to "annoy users" to put pressure on third-party software makers to make their applications more secure. David Cross, a product unit manager at Microsoft, was the group program manager in charge of designing User Account Control (UAC), which, when activated, requires people to run <http://www.news.com/8301-13860_3-9905831-56.html> Vista in standard user mode rather than having administrator privileges, and offers a prompt if they try to install a program. "The reason we put UAC into the (Vista) platform was to annoy users--I'm serious," said Cross, speaking at the RSA Conference <http://www.news.com/RSA-2008-Blanketing-security/2009-7355_3-6236457.html> here Thursday. "Most users had administrator privileges on previous Windows systems and most applications needed administrator privileges to install or run." Cross claimed that annoying users had been part of a Microsoft strategy to force independent software vendors (ISVs) to make their code more secure, as insecure code would trigger a prompt, discouraging users from executing the code. .
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