Comments
 
posted on May 29th 2015, at 13:24
by lunarg
The old method of disabling Java updates through the registry or GPO, mentioned in this article is no longer valid for Java 7 (1.7) and 8 (1.8), nor does it prevent the UAC prompt from appearing when the updater runs in the background. The method explained here is a better, more up-to-date solution to completely disabling Java updates from running, and includes the required registry change to stop the updater from running, preventing the UAC prompt from ever appearing.

Disabling Java update from control panel is not as straight forward as it seems to be. Java update can only be disabled with administrative rights, so you need to run the Java control panel elevated. Since you can't do this t  ...
Add a new comment
 
Your name:
Your e-mail:
Your comment:
 
Basic BBcode is supported.
Captcha:
Type the letters and numbers as shown.
/get/captcha/1713966277
Not readable? Get another.
 
 
 
 
« April 2024»
SunMonTueWedThuFriSat
 123456
78910111213
14151617181920
21222324252627
282930    
 
Links
 
Quote
« If the batteries of a TV remote run out, why do we press the buttons so much harder? »