Bill,

Let me ask again... Can you please give some specific examples of
"Are you sure you want to make this change" messages that you would
be seeing from reputable software properly developed to Win 7
Microsoft standards?

As I recall (and I accept the possibility of a senior moment), that
was the nonsense we saw in the early days of Win7 and Vista when
vendors had not updated their software to comply with the standards.

Today, most of that software is now in compliance and when it has to
change program data, that data is now sitting in a directory outside
of C;\Program Files.

I have found that I continually have to re-evaluate habits I picked
up in the past to compensate for conditions in the past that may or
may not be correct today.

As I believe I implied earlier, I really do not care what you do. You
are free to do whatever you think works best for you. I am concerned
that folks without your technical savvy and infrastructure you have
built on your computers would take your recommendation and assume
they have to do it.

john.

At 10:11 PM 11/28/2013, William Boswell wrote:
>John:
>
>I've had UAC off for several years and have had no threats against
>my computer.  UAC is annoying when it pops up every time I have to
>make any changes within a program.  I don't need to be asked "are
>you sure you want to make this change" (or something like that)
>every time I do a simple task.
>
>None of my data has ever been at risk.  I have several data drives
>(internal and external) that have never been affected by
>intrusions.  I also backup weekly to DVD's and daily with Norton
>backup which includes my genealogy data.  I've been using the Norton
>products since the early 1990's and never had a problem.  I also
>backup all my internal hard drives to external USB drives as a
>precaution.  I fear more that an internal drive will fail rather
>than a virus intrusion.
>
>All of my software is purchased and not bootleg.  I only purchase
>from legitimate sources and I don't use freeware or open source
>software.  I prefer to pay for software from reputable companies.
>
>UAC is for those who don't have security software installed or have
>no idea about security on their computers.  The only threat I have
>is my cats walking on the keyboard when I'm out of the room.  That's
>happened before when one of them hit CTRL-ALT-DEL and rebooted the
>computer without me saving first.
>
>Thanks for the advice, but UAC is a pain in the tush for me.  Maybe
>I've been lucky not to have been hacked.  I did have my Adobe
>account hacked, but that was their computers and mismanagement problem.
>
>Bill
>
>-----Original Message-----
>From: John B. Lisle [mailto:[email protected]]
>Sent: Thursday, November 28, 2013 8:24 PM
>To: [email protected]
>Subject: RE: [LegacyUG] Directory structure
>
>Bill,
>
>1/ Norton and UAC are handling two different classes of threats.
>
>2/ Personally, I found that Norton took too much control of my PC;
>Email especially became a serious problem. IT folks whom I trust
>recommended Avast several years ago and I have not regretted it.
>
>3/ I do all sorts of stuff on my PC, including some development, and
>have never felt a need to turn off UAC. If you are using well
>developed software that follows the rules, it should not be a problem.
>
>4/ Could you please describe what specific operations you do that
>requires UAC off? I would hate to have someone on this list take
>that advice when they do not need to do it and then find themselves
>damaging some crucial data.
>
>thanks,
>john.
>
>
>
>At 02:43 PM 11/28/2013, William Boswell wrote:
> >I use Norton security software and never had a problem with viruses.
> >UAC is just annoying because it pops up every time I want to make
> >changes within a program.
> >
> >-----Original Message-----
> >From: Mike Fry [mailto:[email protected]]
> >Sent: Thursday, November 28, 2013 11:47 AM
> >To: [email protected]
> >Subject: Re: [LegacyUG] Directory structure
> >
> >On 2013/11/28 18:41, William Boswell wrote:
> >
> > > I don't use UAC.  It's turned off because it's annoying.  I'm
> > running Windows 7 Home Premium 64bit.
> >
> >Guess I should add you to my list of suspect emailers :-)
> >
> >--
> >Regards,
> >Mike Fry
> >Johannesburg (g)
> >
> >
> >
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