| ▲ | TZubiri 8 hours ago |
| >No real sandboxing, a mountain of legacy… You have: - Windows Sandbox (consumer-level sandbox)
- Creating a separate User (User folders are permission locked to their user by default, system binaries cannot be modified without admin access)
- HyperV (VM hypervisor)
- Edge Browsers Don't get me wrong MSFT quality is dropping steeply, but this is still a strong point. For comparision, on Ubuntu, user folder by default can be read by all users. |
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| ▲ | michaelsshaw 6 hours ago | parent [-] |
| >Creating a separate User (User folders are permission locked to their user by default, system binaries cannot be modified without admin access) Common practice, and even encouraged by Windows itself, is having the administrator account be the only account. This misuse is a very common thread in Windows systems, and security breaches alike. |
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| ▲ | thewebguyd 3 hours ago | parent | next [-] | | Windows has garbage defaults, but if you read through their documentation on enterprise architecture they definitely do not recommend having admin be the only account. They do in fact encourage separate accounts, multiple level of privileges with login restrictions across different types of machines, etc. Many Linux distros are also guilty of this, disabling the root account by default and having the only user have sudo privileges, just like Windows. | | |
| ▲ | michaelsshaw an hour ago | parent [-] | | Yes, however much more can be done in the user's own directory on Unix systems. Needing sudo raises some eyebrows, whereas most Windows users don't necessarily understand UAC, and almost never think twice about pressing "Yes" on the popups, which are seen more as an annoyance than something critical for safety. Some even completely disable UAC. |
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| ▲ | vel0city an hour ago | parent | prev [-] | | > Common practice, and even encouraged by Windows itself, is having the administrator account be the only account. This hasn't been true since Vista. Kind of even before that with XP, it really showcased using multiple accounts to home users with a much more stylized user selection screen. |
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