Probably the fact that, even if you define the account as Admin in windows, you still need to select "Windows sudo" (run as Administrator) before it actually elevates privilege.
That's just a "hey dumbass, did you try to run command prompt or was it ThreeTittyBabes.jpg.exe?" check. The admin users just don't need to enter an admin password to proceed.
What you're talking about is UAC flipping out because you double clicked on something and it want's admin privilege (the GUI equivalent of what bioemerl talked about).
I'm talking about exactly what bioemerl was: You open cmd window, try to run a command and it bitches that you need admin rights, as an admin. So, you have to go back, search for cmd, then select the option: Run as administrator.
Probably the fact that, even if you define the account as Admin in windows, you still need to select "Windows sudo" (run as Administrator) before it actually elevates privilege.
That's just a "hey dumbass, did you try to run command prompt or was it ThreeTittyBabes.jpg.exe?" check. The admin users just don't need to enter an admin password to proceed.
No, it's not.
What you're talking about is UAC flipping out because you double clicked on something and it want's admin privilege (the GUI equivalent of what bioemerl talked about).
I'm talking about exactly what bioemerl was: You open cmd window, try to run a command and it bitches that you need admin rights, as an admin. So, you have to go back, search for cmd, then select the option: Run as administrator.
That's because too many virus infections have started with admins launching things as admin by default
Use one of the elevate as admin scripts