| ▲ | dijit 10 hours ago | |||||||
People very often run notepad as administrator (anything launched from administrative powershell instances will run like this). In fact, if you enabled developer mode on your computer there's a registry key that gets set to run notepad as admin, it's: `runas /savecred /user:PC-NAME\Administrator “notepad %1”` in HKEY_CLASSES_ROOT-> * -> shell -> runas (new folder) -> (Default) And, if I'm not totally mistaken, notepad also has the ability to reopen files as administrator, but I don't remember how to invoke it. Regardless, notepad is a very trusted application and is often run as Administrator. Often it's more trusted than any other utility to modify system files. | ||||||||
| ▲ | patates 10 hours ago | parent | next [-] | |||||||
> And, if I'm not totally mistaken, notepad also has the ability to reopen files as administrator, but I don't remember how to invoke it. I think that's a notepad plus plus feature. I had it offer to reopen itself as administrator when editing system files like HOSTS. | ||||||||
| ▲ | MarleTangible 7 hours ago | parent | prev [-] | |||||||
> Regardless, notepad is a very trusted application and is often run as Administrator. Sorry to say this, but Notepad was a very trusted application now. I cannot believe that such a core utility has a 8.8 CVE, it sounds like a joke tbh. | ||||||||
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