Thanks for all the responses. I think the issue for me has to do with
installing some older software that prompts the warning when I open it. I
was looking for a way to avoid having the warning come up each for time for
that specific software (in other words, a program I know to be safe). I
don't want to de-activate the warning across the board.
Vista isn't that smart. It doesn't "learn" from what you tell it
previously. Therefore if you have some legacy application written way
before Microsoft's latest phony push about security Vista will nag
about the same thing every time you repeat the action that caused it
in the first place even if you tell Vista you trust the application,
it has no ability to remember what you told it last time.
This of course could be easily modified by some kind of "rules" list
similar to what many firewall applications use. They nag ONLY once,
the first time something happens it suspects. After it flags a suspect
application it brings up a screen and you tell it how you want it
handled in the future then it remembers and it does as you wish.
Microsoft apparently doesn't have software engineers smart enough to
employ this simple strategy.
The naysayers club (fanboys) out of ignorance will claim this type of
solution is too simplistic falsely arguing some malware could trick
it's way into being trusted. The reality is good security software can
compare a file's unique signature and if something comes along and
pretends to be something you've told it to trust unless it has the
exact same signature (like a fingerprint) it still would flag it and
give a warning.
My biggest gripe about Windows is it is a mature application having
been around over twenty years in one form or another and still
Microsoft hasn't included even basic intelligence, yet each new
version grows larger than the previous one.
The only way to get UAC to stop nagging short of turning the damn
thing off is to change ownership and permissions for each of your
problem applications/folders/files by accessing their security tab.
While it isn't that hard to do, it is clumsy and time consuming if you
have a lot of things to change.