You can not change my mind.
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What is interesting to me is that Steam somehow manages to run elevated commands when installing games and it, itself, never actually gives any UAC warnings and even kinda breaks if you force Steam to run as an admin from the compatibility tab.
Unfortunately, I think the explanation for this one is that Steam bypasses a lot of Windows security and can be used as an exploration vector.
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I use to think if I opened Explorer as an administrator I could turn off the parental controls my mom put on the computer
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I cannot change your mind
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This post did not contain any content.wrote last edited by [email protected]
Sudo su -
Sudo dnf remove windows
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it just blithely demands an elevated runtime for no reason because its developers were morons.
Itβs always, always, this one.
Moron developer chiming in: it's definitely this.
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. . .6 different and contradictory ways that all have to be backward comparable.
After witnessing their handling of Control Panel vs. "trendy no-option we-think-you're-stupid Control Panel" for like 4 straight versions, I think this has just become their philosophy at this point. Lol
I was just forced to upgrade at work. There are still number of dependencies to the old style of settings, but they've done great job on the new panel for the most part.
Everything is in one place, no longer do we have dozen different modals for everything, it makes a lot more sense, provides more information about devices.
It's obviously a lot of work, but I think they're taking it in the right direction. -
What is interesting to me is that Steam somehow manages to run elevated commands when installing games and it, itself, never actually gives any UAC warnings and even kinda breaks if you force Steam to run as an admin from the compatibility tab.
I'd hazard a gueas it's not touching a system drive, but rather saving all files as a regular user.
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Warning, this program wants to perform some actions as administrator. >>>OKAY<<<<
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I'd hazard a gueas it's not touching a system drive, but rather saving all files as a regular user.
Steam installs a system level background service to avoid UAC prompts. There was a privilege escalation vulnerability exploiting this service disclosed in 2019.
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Windows has sudo now.
wrote last edited by [email protected]I really wish they used different name for that utility though, since it has nothing to do with ""Linux""
sudo
.It is like when they released a package manager called winget, which is not really a package manager, but more like a program/installer manager.