One thing I've always liked about the Viper is that it made no excuses in striving to be the quickest amongst its competitors. To a point, more power and bigger tires was enough of a formula to get it there.
The car has enough power now that 0-60 is limited only by available grip; with an '08 you can get to 60 in first, but won't be able to use full throttle on the way. It's only a matter of time before cars will be traction limited on OEM tires through the 1/8th, maybe eventually the 1/4 (a la Hennessey TT).
The only thing that can improve the Viper's position is by getting more weight over the drive tires. The "wrong" Porsche 911 has it right, with the bulk of its weight on its drive tires at rest. AWD cars can't help but have 100% of their weight on their drive tires. The Viper has a bit over 50% at rest, while the Vette has less than 50%. Maybe it's time to move the V10 to the trunk?
As for nannying, I think the Viper is actually quite neutered from the factory. They purposely made it understeer quite a bit steady-state with narrow wheels and tires up front, so fewer people would wreck their cars on the drive home. The Honda S2000 I bought new about 7 years ago was much less dumbed-down in that regard. At least Dodge was nice enough to leave us enough room up front to fit "proper" sized wheels and tires and remedy the understeer, but I don't see how that's any different from providing a traction control feature that can be turned off. The latter is a lot less work...
Sure, TC or ABS are two more things that can go wrong, but they are quite commonplace these days. Our cars are already dependent on so many features and devices under the covers of equal or greater complexity just to start the engine, it seems unwarranted to stress about these small additions. Things like electronic fuel injection, with a myriad of pumps, sensors, and injectors; the security system with coded chips in the key and ECU dependency; not to mention the fancy and somewhat unique cam-in-cam setup in use on the 2008s.
I think people have the wrong idea about the impact of driving aids, at least in regards to those in play while going round a track. A normal traction or stability control system is designed to keep the weekend warrior from wadding their car up; it isn't going to make them produce Schumacher performances in the absence of talent. In truth, only the finest and most sophisticated of these systems (i.e., those out of the reach of most, and certainly not anything coming on a Chevy, at least not yet) are advanced enough to not be a hindrance to a very good driver while in operation.
Now that some other manufacturers are producing motors with some balls and combining it with a greater % weight on the drive wheels, the front-engined/RWD Viper is doomed to start losing 0-60 and 1/4 mile races. For those whose egos are tied to such things, ..