I don't quite agree. Windows uses control-alt-delete as a security
device. It binds those keys as a hotkey in such a way that no other
aplication can replace it. This is why it is used at logon; it
prevents a user from creating a program that looked like a logon
prompt, and could bind the control-alt-delete keys to display a
password prompt. (pressing control-alt-delete in any application
other than the logon screen would display the "shutdown/logoff/task
manager" window, at which point you would know not to enter your
password in any prompt)
If someone were to find a way to bind to those hotkeys, would you
then consider this a security issue with Windows? If so, how is
Apple's failure to block kill calls to the screen saver not a
security issue?
Gavin