But is this easily fixed, or is this more of an architectual problem?
If its an architectual problem and the obvious solutions lead to security 
issues, the most obvious hack would be to enable a graphical way to install 
themes system-wide.

There is a graphical tool called gnome-art. It seems to be unmaintained though.
Perhaps some of the code there can merge with the appearance applet in the 
future.

A simple show filter that lets us choose between 'installed', 'available' could 
do the trick.
Another more ubuntu-way approach would be, to make the add button open up 
add/remove and add the 100 most popular themes to the ubuntu repositories 
automatically using some script. 

That last solution would make the most sense, because some of these
themes depend on gtk-engines not installed by default. It would be the
same sort of solution as has been implemented within firefox.

With that scenarion, all we would need is a 'install more themes' button in the 
appearance window.
Off course the themes should get some sort of .desktop files to make them 
available in add/remove

-- 
[Theme Manager] No installation option for system wide themes, difference is 
not communicated in the user interface
https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/24280
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