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Too much security in Mountain Lion

I only switched to Mountain Lion last week. It seems that every time I do anything I get a pop up asking for my password. I am the only person who can access my Mac, so is there a way I can switch all this security off, or some of it.


Examples:


I start up Safari and I am asked if Safari can access my keychain.

I am frequently asked for my admin password to unlock things, for example to start up Carbon Copy Cloner.


There are too many other instances to mention, and I am tired of always being interrupted to give my password when it is TOTALLY unnecessary!!


Thanks Apple people, but can you let me know how to switch this "security" off?

Graphics NVIDIA GeForce 9400 256MB-OTHER, OS X Mountain Lion (10.8.3), MacMini early 2009; 8Gb RAM

Posted on Apr 12, 2013 3:07 PM

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Posted on Apr 12, 2013 4:18 PM

My experience with Carbon Copy Cloner is that it always asks for my Password because it needs to access protected files in order to do create the clone. Besides this is the CCC author's decision, not Apple's


As for your Keychain, you can unlock that while you are logged in via Applications -> Utilities -> Keychain Access -> Edit -> Change Settings for Keychain Login. Chances are it is set to lock after 'n' minutes of inactivity.


Now if you are constantly trying to access files, change, create, delete, move files in protected folders then you will need to give your password so you are elevated to 'root' privileges. Files in your home Folder should not require any password access.

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Question marked as Best reply

Apr 12, 2013 4:18 PM in response to Fleet034

My experience with Carbon Copy Cloner is that it always asks for my Password because it needs to access protected files in order to do create the clone. Besides this is the CCC author's decision, not Apple's


As for your Keychain, you can unlock that while you are logged in via Applications -> Utilities -> Keychain Access -> Edit -> Change Settings for Keychain Login. Chances are it is set to lock after 'n' minutes of inactivity.


Now if you are constantly trying to access files, change, create, delete, move files in protected folders then you will need to give your password so you are elevated to 'root' privileges. Files in your home Folder should not require any password access.

Apr 12, 2013 4:48 PM in response to Fleet034

Back up all data. Don't continue unless you're sure you can restore from a backup, even if you're unable to log in.

This procedure will unlock all your user files (not system files) and reset their ownership and access-control lists to the default. If you've set special values for those attributes on any of your files, they will be reverted. In that case, either stop here, or be prepared to recreate the settings if necessary. Do so only after verifying that those settings didn't cause the problem. If none of this is meaningful to you, you don't need to worry about it.


Step 1

If you have more than one user account, and the one in question is not an administrator account, then temporarily promote it to administrator status in the Users & Groups preference pane. To do that, unlock the preference pane using the credentials of an administrator, check the box marked Allow user to administer this computer, then reboot. You can demote the problem account back to standard status when this step has been completed.

Triple-click the following line to select it. Copy the selected text to the Clipboard (command-C):

{ sudo chflags -R nouchg,nouappnd ~ $TMPDIR.. ; sudo chown -R $UID:staff ~ $_ ; sudo chmod -R u+rwX ~ $_ ; chmod -R -N ~ $_ ; } 2> /dev/null

Launch the Terminal application in any of the following ways:

☞ Enter the first few letters of its name into a Spotlight search. Select it in the results (it should be at the top.)

☞ In the Finder, select Go Utilities from the menu bar, or press the key combination shift-command-U. The application is in the folder that opens.

☞ Open LaunchPad. Click Utilities, then Terminal in the icon grid.

Paste into the Terminal window (command-V). You'll be prompted for your login password, which won't be displayed when you type it. You may get a one-time warning to be careful. If you don’t have a login password, you’ll need to set one before you can run the command. If you see a message that your username "is not in the sudoers file," then you're not logged in as an administrator.


The command will take a noticeable amount of time to run. Wait for a new line ending in a dollar sign (“$”) to appear, then quit Terminal.

Step 2 (optional)


Step 1 should give you usable permissions in your home folder. This step will restore special attributes set by OS X on some user folders to protect them from unintended deletion or renaming. You can skip this step if you don't consider that protection to be necessary, and if everything is working as expected after step 1.

Boot into Recovery by holding down the key combination command-R at startup. Release the keys when you see a gray screen with a spinning dial.

When the OS X Utilities screen appears, select

Utilities Terminal

from the menu bar. A Terminal window will open.

In the Terminal window, type this:

res


Press the tab key. The partial command you typed will automatically be completed to this:

resetpassword


Press return. A Reset Password window will open. You’re not going to reset a password.

Select your boot volume ("Macintosh HD," unless you gave it a different name) if not already selected.

Select your username from the menu labeled Select the user account if not already selected.

Under Reset Home Directory Permissions and ACLs, click the Reset button.

Select

Restart

from the menu bar.

May 3, 2014 1:43 PM in response to Linc Davis

I triple clicked, the terminal command copied it and pasted it but terminal immediately returns

Bad substitute.


What am I doing wrong? I am running Mavericks 10.9.2 and was getting permission errors when I tried to download Filezilla. I tried to run fix permissions and ACL's but the "done" button became a ghost and after an hour of waiting nothing happened and there was no disc noise from my iMac to indicate that it was doing anything.

Too much security in Mountain Lion

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