6 Sep

While the idea of UAC is good, its implementation has several visible problems such as UAC doesn’t remember user’s choice. You should click Continue for your favorite program over and over again when you launch it. UAC can’t determine if the program is malicious or not. It relies on user’s choice. So the user should become security expert himself to use UAC’s security features correctly. Sometimes UAC shows a lot of alerts for good programs and ordinary actions like changing desktop wallpaper that overwhelm user and disturb it a lot.
Several days after they first meet with UAC, users “learn” to click Continue without reading what alert says or just simply disabling UAC. From this moment you may think that you have no protection at all and User Account Control becomes almost useless.
Here is a free tool called Smart UAC Replacement to upgrade and improve User Account Control.
Smart UAC Replacement is free of all Microsoft Windows Vista UAC disadvantages and presents effective and up-to-date methods of providing first class security both for Windows Vista and for earlier versions of Windows operating system.
Smart UAC Replacement is easier and more comfortable than the standard Microsoft Windows UAC. You don’t need to answer the same questions all the time anymore. Tracking harmful and suspicious program processes allows Smart UAC Replacement to find unknown malicious programs and prevent their activity. Extensive database of more than 300 000 known threats raises your protection level even higher.
Key Features of Smart UAC Replacement:
Interception of all potentially dangerous actions to your computer. When a potentially dangerous action or program is recognized, an alert shows up. For each program you can allow or deny certain action or create an automatic rule for it with one mouse click. Tracking of harmful and suspicious program and preventing malicious activity using heuristic rules. Regularly updated database of more than 300 000 known threats which are automatically recognized and blocked. Fighting rootkits programs, which hide the fact of existence of malicious programs in your system. Smart UAC Replacement monitores installation of rootkits and prevents them from running. Ability to manually edit all security rules created earlier. Fully customizable User-friendly and handy interface Online database updates Full time professional support
You will get a blur color alert when Smart UAC intercepts unauthorized access to important parts of your system. Here is an example of Windows Media Player trying to make changes to the registry key that doesn’t belong to it.

When you run a malicious program such as a trojan embedded to a legitimate program, you will get a red alert warning.

If you’re a basic computer user, I recommend you to replace UAC rather than disabling it. The best part about Smart UAC Replacement is it works on Windows 2000 / XP / 2003 and Vista (only 32bit)! The minimum CPU and memory requirements to run Smart UAC Replacement in Windows 2000 is Pentium 300MHz + 64MB, Windows XP with Pentium 500MHz + 128MB and Vista with Pentium 1GHz + 512MB. Smart UAC Replacement is a freeware.
[ Download Smart UAC Replacement ]
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17 Responses for "Upgrade your Windows User Account Control with Smart UAC Replacement"
Very nice!
As a power user, I am very annoyed with the limited features of UAC, even though I very much appreciate the features of it. I trust myself enough to turn it off, but this will allow me to turn it on again without having it make me want to bash my head against the wall.
Thanks
Thnx Raymond
Very Good Information. Very useful.
Well it does have the \’allow/deny this program\’ that should have shipped with Vista, but I am not sure on Security Stronghold: a former program of theirs – TrueSword – is classified as rogue by Spyware Warrior.
I\\\’ve read somewhere that this product is crashing some Vista installations with a INVALID_KERNEL_HANDLE BSOD error.
Great little proggie,hope its not a r.hog..
This is awesome, so very helpful. You did it again! Keep up the great, helpful work!!
This program looks to be pure gold! Thanks!
I am a power user, and I like UAC.
UAC + Secure desktop + No white lists = Safer Windows.
Anyone else using this, check your task manager.
For me it is using a constant 25-36 cpu, is that normal?
well, i install it and removed it immediately. well not really immediately. it took me several attempts to remove it.
i regularly do not use admin account and vista\\\’s uac allowed me to install the proggy (and asked for admin password, of course) and after reboot smart uac threw a slew of pop ups at me. original uac never did it. then i tried to uninstall the smart uac, but it wouldnt allow me saying i needed admin priv. wth!!! isnt it supposed to ease those kind of stuff? vista\\\’s uac always let me perform uninstall. so, i had to log off and it just froze my vista. and my vista had never frozen before. after a forceful reboot i log on into admin account and try to perform uninstall and puff… blue screen (of death, of course) then reboot again.
now im really pi**ed off. happily, after disabling smart uac, i could uninstall the \\\”smart\\\” uac. of couse the prog left some stuff i had to delete manually and it left vista uac turned off.
so, thanks for the prog, but… ill skip this one.
ps: hey, raymond, i really like your site. thanks!
HAVE ANYONE CHECKED THIS
http://www.siteadvisor.com/sites/replaceuac.com
Thx! very useful to my Xp and Vista! U rock Raymond!
EDIT:
Hello Raymond and everybody:
-I have checked ReplaceUAC to McAfee SiteAdvisor website and got this: http://www.siteadvisor.com/sites/replaceuac.com . Since SiteAdvisor has already been a “Website checker” for years, Maybe it can be our next consideration about Smart UAC??? :blink:
-More reviews about Smart UAC:
http://www.wilderssecurity.com/showthread.php?p=1294291#post1294291
-Smart UAC has also been hosted by Softpedia, one of the trusted places for softwares shopping/freewares:
http://www.softpedia.com/get/Security/Firewall/Smart-UAC-Replacement.shtml
:blink: (Thinking) Sorry and Thx
I used this tool and initially thought it was great but my start ups were taking significantly longer. When I tried to uninstall it the first several time i got the BSOD. I don’t suggest this tool.
Jimmy, do you want to be more secure and pay nothing for it? Security can’t exist on thin air platform. We should give out something (like a fraction of the computer’s performance) to become more secure.
I’m using Smart UAC Replacement on my Vista Ultimate for two weeks already and have no problems with it.
Good program.
Hi guys,
let me just expose may point of view and tell you how I handle these problems.
First of all, after trying Vista for a while, I’ve got disgusted about it and I’m back now to XP.
But I still have to use Vista for testing purposes. I do it, but UAC is off for sure.
Now to the interesting part: how do I protect my self from nasty viruses and other malicious attacks from the Internet?
Well, the main guideline in all my handling is that ***I don’t trust Windows***.
That means:
- I’m not under Windows, I’m on top of it.
- Windows doesn’t tell me what to do, I tell Windows what to do.
- I’m not a Windows’s slave, Windows i my slave.
- Windows is not the pack leader, I’m the pack leader.
Concretized, here is what I do:
1.
I always install several (at least two) Windows on my computer, just in case I need to examine what is going on.
(It may be some temporary file that Windows don’t let me to open and that is removed when you close Windows.
In such cases I just turn off the main power, I restart the computer in another Windows and I can then open and examine the suspicious file without problems.)
2.
I always have several logical drives on my computer, and at least two HD (for safety against disk crashes).
During installation of Windows I make several binary copies of it (using Norton Ghost) on different well documented points.
I do that also after major changes (installation of new software or major Windows upgrades).
This way I can switch back and forth between well known situations with 100% security.
3.
Since I don’t trust Windows’s own roll-back mechanism, I remove all the files created for that purpose when upgrades are done (which will give me smaller Ghost files).
Since I don’t trust third part software providers to be able to really clean up everything when the software is uninstalled, I uninstall by rolling back to a previous Ghost version.
Doing so I’m 100% (I mean o-n-e-h-u-n-d-r-e-d-p-e-r-c-e-n-t) sure that everything (I mean e-v-e-r-y-t-h-i-n-g) is restored as it was before.
4.
Since I don’t like that another (Windows) to tell me how to organize my stuff, I do not make use of the ‘Documents and Settings’ folder or any of its components.
I keep all the files generated by my activities (mails, documents, downloaded files, etc. etc.) outside the drive where Windows is installed.
This way my work is not affected by the switching between different installation images (Ghost files).
In addition, I have 100% control of my entire work and I can easily organize my backup routines.
5.
If Windows is infected by some virus, or if it starts to behave badly, I kick it out, by rolling back to a previous Ghost file.
Everything is back to normal in just fifteen minutes. With 100% certainty.
6.
If the HD crashes or if I need to replace it with a bigger one, I just format the new HD and I regenerate the contents of all the logical drives from the appropriate Ghost files.
Everything is back to normal in just a half hour.
I have done this for more than ten years and it works magnificently.
I’m the boss, really, and Windows has nothing to say about that!
Hoping to inspire someone to find out a better way of dealing with Windows.
Thank you.
Furio -
Not Windows Slave? Even after all that crap that you go through for it?? Hahahhaha
You know what’s worse than being a windows slave? Not knowing that you are!
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