Read more.Elevator, a freeware Windows application, allows specified applications to bypass UAC.
Read more.Elevator, a freeware Windows application, allows specified applications to bypass UAC.
great proof of concept - shame it didnt work for me, been trying to get it to run coretemp from startup without having to accept the UAC prompt - failed on vista x64
I just edit the security policy (secpol.msc) and set it to elevate without prompting for administrators in admin approval mode. That way you don't lose the UAC altogether (and subsequently protected mode in IE is kept) and you don't get anymore annoying popups.
I thought UAC was supposed to 'learn' safe apps anyway?
Simon
(\___/) (\___/) (\___/) (\___/) (\___/) (\___/) (\___/)
(='.'=) (='.'=) (='.'=) (='.'=) (='.'=) (='.'=) (='.'=)
(")_(") (")_(") (")_(") (")_(") (")_(") (")_(") (")_(")
This is bunny and friends. He is fed up waiting for everyone to help him out, and decided to help himself instead!
Whats to stop some hacker making your Elevator from allowing their own malicious software? I don't see how it helps with the security much....
or turn UAC off
I do know everything, just not all at once. It's a virtual memory problem.
There are currently 1 users browsing this thread. (0 members and 1 guests)