Linked by Thom Holwerda on Thu 16th Feb 2012 14:46 UTC
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RE[7]: This article is factually wrong
by Neolander on Thu 16th Feb 2012 21:07
in reply to "RE[6]: This article is factually wrong"
You can download signed software from anywhere. The certificate is in the developer's name and Apple has no way to restrict what is signed or where it's distributed.
AFAIK, Apple is the only source of signing keys and may blacklist any key they have delivered previously using OS security updates. If both of these statements are true, they have enough resources to ban software from any developer at will, though possibly not in a fine-grained way.
Even if you are not using the "Allow anything" preference, all you need to do is right click an app, click open and then click through an "Are you sure" prompt. From then on you can run the app with no prompt.
Sure, when running a program on OS X doesn't work, your first idea is to right click it, especially considering the frequent use of right clicks in the OS X UI and the simplicity of performing a right click on Macs...
I am not saying that running unsigned software is impossible on OS X 10.8, though it may become the case in later releases of OS X. But it does seem that Apple want to make it difficult on purpose.
Edited 2012-02-16 21:16 UTC
RE[8]: This article is factually wrong
by Thom_Holwerda on Thu 16th Feb 2012 21:08
in reply to "RE[7]: This article is factually wrong"
RE[8]: This article is factually wrong
by brichpmr on Sun 19th Feb 2012 15:42
in reply to "RE[7]: This article is factually wrong"




Member since:
2005-07-06
Unfortunately, Thom's anti-Apple blinders are on so tight he is spreading verifiably false information. There is nothing stopping user's from installing software from anywhere in Mountain Lion and there is, at the worst, a minor easily avoided vendor imposed hassle.
1. You can download signed software from anywhere. The certificate is in the developer's name and Apple has no way to restrict what is signed or where it's distributed.
2. Even if you are not using the "Allow anything" preference, all you need to do is right click an app, click open and then click through an "Are you sure" prompt. From then on you can run the app with no prompt.
There is nothing in this release that makes it difficult to get around Gatekeeper if it's turned on and there is an option to turn it off completely if my #2 is too much for you.