Post by gradunermicty on May 25, 2019 16:10:57 GMT -5
Main category, Utilities
Sub category, Security
Developer, Objective Development Software GmbH
Filesize, 41779
Title, Little Snitch
❱ bit.ly/2X5O3uZ
Little Snitch.v.4.3.2.tar.gz
The following Trend Micro products detect and block this threat:
Little Snitch is a firewall application and, as you may know, your Mac has a built-in firewall that you can turn on and use to quietly block unauthorized incoming network connections. So why buy a separate app if you already have something built-in? The answer is simple: Little Snitch does more than just block or allow incoming network connections. It gives you detailed information on all your network communication, whether it's from the outside world coming into your Mac or it's being sent from your Mac to anywhere on the internet.
I'm so glad they built this feature.
It depends what you mean by "free". Of course all software should be handled with varying degrees of skepticism, but open source software can be directly verified (though this also requires building from source), and you don't have to just hope that the author was honest.
Little Snitch review: Lock down your network traffic
Languages: Multiple languages
Official:
Updated for Mojave macpkg.icu/?id=10426&kw=4.1.3.little.snitch.ird2ne.zip [43450 KB]
on MacOS macpkg.icu/?id=10426&kw=7shAE.vers.4.2.4.Little.Snitch.tar.gz [42614 KB]
I started using it again a few months ago, and this time I banned myself from "allow all" except for things that I trust/reallly need... It's painful, but also just incredible how many superfluous and obviously-metric-gathering-disguised-as-a-feature apps do. They are relentless. Funnily enough, I vaguely recall that the crack for an older version involved setting a rule where the app would block its own traffic to their own license server. I'm not sure that validating a license counts as data collection, but still pretty funny IMO. Yes, it would require constant maintenance on their part. If they needed to up the price to make such a strategy viable, so be it. As it stands, I uninstalled out of frustration after using the demo for 6 hours. The alerts and interruptions never stop. Your Mac is a Net whisperer; a sleep talker; a teller of tales; a spreader of information. It's always sending messages to unseen servers while you go about your daily work. How do you keep tabs on and take control of what your Mac is talking to? Objective Development's $45 Little Snitch is the ticket to truly understanding and managing who your Mac makes contact with. Objective Development (plus we do have a database of IP addresses used by companies in order to ban them from seeding to us, most torrent clients have them now) You can be concerned enough about Internet safety that you changed prefab rules, like requiring individual approval of domain access in Safari, instead of letting it use all those ports. You’ll have to allow sites and items referenced on sites one at a time as you visit, but that offers some people more piece of mind against unwanted Web-based trackers and even malware. Announcement: Upgrade to macOS Mojave
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| 41779 kbytes | Torrent LITTLE SNITCH VER 5.3.2 NDQFNQ 4.0.5 Language French
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