In both cases what the user sees is actually this: http://i.imgur.com/H0uVqFe.jpg
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We all know users are click-happy. Why is this even a built-in-by-design capability of Microsoft Office? That seemingly cannot be disabled.pic.twitter.com/cDcmhRIXwT
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This has been a UI design trend for 20 years. Hide more and more info from the user and somehow expect them to make an informed decision.
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I noticed this with macro warnings for sure. https://insights.sei.cmu.edu/cert/2016/06/who-needs-to-exploit-vulnerabilities-when-you-have-macros.html …
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UX people, just try "this looks bad. here's a few bad things about it..."
Thanks. Twitter will use this to make your timeline better. UndoUndo
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I think this is because they want to make all security dialogs look consistent.
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This was done in Office 2007 BTW.
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