activity monitor
how do I know what users listed are legitimate?
how do I know what users listed are legitimate?
When I look at the Activity Monitor processes list on my Mac (which is running Ventura),
My guess is that most of the time, if you see a user name in Activity Monitor that begins with a "_", you're looking at an internal user created by macOS. My guess is that in these cases, the corresponding code is running with fewer privileges than it would get if it was running as root. Thus the plethora of user names very likely reflects an effort to isolate some parts of the system for security hardening reasons.
When I look at the Activity Monitor processes list on my Mac (which is running Ventura),
My guess is that most of the time, if you see a user name in Activity Monitor that begins with a "_", you're looking at an internal user created by macOS. My guess is that in these cases, the corresponding code is running with fewer privileges than it would get if it was running as root. Thus the plethora of user names very likely reflects an effort to isolate some parts of the system for security hardening reasons.
I think what is going on is that the OP is seeing lots and lots of normal system and applications processes listed in Activity Monitor. Some of them may even be running under special user names created solely for them, reflecting Apple’s attempts to partition off some parts of the operating system and run those parts with reduced privileges.
Someone with no software development background might have a hard time figuring out which processes and user names are legitimate, and might become alarmed even if their system had not been compromised and there was nothing to worry about.
Conniechung wrote:
thank you. My issue was not so much the root ones or things like that the _nearby and some others especially when I see so much activity running when I don’t have anything open , after ing having done force quit, turned off my wifi and Bluetooth etc. I understand things are always running in the background servicing but to have triple digit KBs active with users other than myself and Apple associated ones running seemed suspect. Not that I have too much sensitive but I still don’t need someone coming in and looking at my cat’s veterinary files- he’s a very private feline 😼
If I tell Activity Monitor to show "Other User Processes" (View > Other User Processes), and sort by the Memory column, I only see three processes owned by "_" users that are taking up more than 10 MB of memory.
These are:
There are a lot of processes taking up about 1 MB – 5 MB of memory each.
Sorry, but that is just not enough information in order for us to be able to assist you with a potential solution.
thank you. My issue was not so much the root ones or things like that the _nearby and some others especially when I see so much activity running when I don’t have anything open , after ing having done force quit, turned off my wifi and Bluetooth etc. I understand things are always running in the background servicing but to have triple digit KBs active with users other than myself and Apple associated ones running seemed suspect. Not that I have too much sensitive but I still don’t need someone coming in and looking at my cat’s veterinary files- he’s a very private feline 😼
Thank you so much for both replies of help, especially such detailed explanations to help me understand. I’m not savvy on the software, hardware, safety procedures and the internal backend ways. I can take any unit apart and put it back together and have it work the same but I still wouldn’t understand the ”brain” working end. You’ve made things much easier to read through and closer to grasp intellectually for me . If you’re ever looking for a similar tutorial on the physiological and psychological workings of the human brain , I’d be happy to oblige and maybe start up a new superhero team. Down-lobe would be a cool name
activity monitor