You are right that the computer asks you. But people click yes because they are used to ignoring warning signs. The software relies on people making perfect choices every time and that never happens.
It should tell me what should I look before I trust it. Not trusting the workspace means I might as well use Notepad to open it. I wouldn't think that tasks.json include autorun tasks in addition to build actions.
I always wondered why. Now I finally know that it auto runs code in that folder.
Who thought this is a good idea and why wasn't it specified in ALL CAPS in that dialog?
Is it even documented anywhere?
Very infrequent vscode user here, beginning to think it's some kind of Eclipse.
You are right that the computer asks you. But people click yes because they are used to ignoring warning signs. The software relies on people making perfect choices every time and that never happens.
It should tell me what should I look before I trust it. Not trusting the workspace means I might as well use Notepad to open it. I wouldn't think that tasks.json include autorun tasks in addition to build actions.
Who remembers autorun.exe
Yeah but it's one of those useless permission requests along the lines of "Do you want this program to work or not?"
They're pawning off responsibility without giving people a real choice.
It's like the old permission dialog for Android that was pretty much "do you want to use this app?". Obviously most people just say yes.
There's a reason Google changed that.
To be fair I'm sure Microsoft would switch to a saner permission model if they could but it's kind of too late.