While not ideal, I would still choose this every day of the week instead of suffering Windows Defender.
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Replying to @srgpqt @fr0styNinja
Reasons Windows Defender is better: 1) Allows you to run the exe without a dialog box if it's a well-known exe, 2) Allows you to run the exe right from the dialog box if you want to override its decision 3) Properly allows secondary store fronts to run executables (Steam, et al).
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As sad as it is, Mac executable locking is WAY worse than Windows (and of course Linux). Way, way, way worse. Apple has gone off the deep end.
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Replying to @cmuratori @fr0styNinja
FWIW I basically never see that Gatekeeper popup, and I use mac full time (as a user and a developer).. so the only people inconvenienced are people who want to distribute untrusted apps outside official channels. 1/2
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Replying to @srgpqt @fr0styNinja
If you never see that popup, you must not be doing much? Literally just download and run, say, Electron, and it will pop up. Of course users don't have to see it, because developers are forced to jump through insane hoops to sign then notarize every binary they distribute.
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Replying to @cmuratori @fr0styNinja
I’ve mostly worked on iOS apps, and got used to signing our apps with our enterprise certificate, or with our clients’ distribution certificates. Hasn’t been too problematic. From what I see, notarizing is very similar to submitting to the App Store. Seems reasonable to me.
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Submitting to the app store isn't reasonable...
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Correct - it is a _personal_ computer, and the user should have the choice to, say, trust Steam as a store if they want to. On Apple, you literally cannot. You can _only_ choose to trust Apple, and never anyone else, which is the opposite of a "personal computer".
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Replying to @cmuratori @ToseNikolov and
If Apple let other people ship trusted storefronts, then there might be an argument here, but they don't, so it is not a "keeping the user safe" issue. It is an "Apple gets to control your decisions" issue, which is not remotely the same.
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Replying to @cmuratori @ToseNikolov and
And all of this goes for iOS as well. Android allows third parties to ship app stores (Amazon ships one, for example). Apple does not. This is a real, serious problem for user rights, and in fact, Apple is currently in a class action lawsuit over it.
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(See https://www.scotusblog.com/case-files/cases/apple-v-pepper/ … for details on the case, which I am very much hoping Apple loses, and loses huge)
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Certainly, there should be some mechanism to authorize a third-party “root of trust” aka app store. But that is a separate issue from allowing random potentially malicious software downloaded from the internet to run on my grandma’s computer.
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But that is not the issue. If Apple actually allowed third party credentialing, this would not really be an issue. But they don't. They _only_ allow Apple credentialing. That is simply not a sound policy model for computing, especially not personal computing.
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