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Q: nbagent process, what is it?

Does anyone know what the nbagent process is?

 

I noticed yesterday, courtesy of Little Snitch, it was triyng to connect to swcdn.apple.com which looked ok

 

Today it is trying to connect to a5.mzstatic.com

 

Just a little curious as it has never seen this process in the past.

 

Cheers

Paul

Posted on Jul 11, 2014 2:14 PM

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Q: nbagent process, what is it?

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  • by OregonRebel,

    OregonRebel OregonRebel Jul 26, 2016 2:49 PM in response to DRailroad
    Level 1 (37 points)
    Mac OS X
    Jul 26, 2016 2:49 PM in response to DRailroad

    So because you've never heard of it means it's no good?

    I'd say you're not as much of an expert as you profess to be.

     

    Not everyone needs LS (or don't know they do). Most users are oblivious to the amount of information their computer is distributing to outside sources.

     

    I don't need Logic Pro or Keynote, but I'm not wasting time in the forums telling people I don't need them.

     

    This is a place to seek help or give help. How does telling people that you don't feel the need to use a piece of software accomplish either?

    That's like stopping by an auto dealership just to tell a salesperson that you don't see the need for airbags - the manufacturer already provides reliable safeguards and security features.

     

    Fine - you don't want them. But millions of other people people do!

  • by OregonRebel,

    OregonRebel OregonRebel Jul 26, 2016 3:13 PM in response to Linc Davis
    Level 1 (37 points)
    Mac OS X
    Jul 26, 2016 3:13 PM in response to Linc Davis

    Actually, this discussion is PROOF that Little Snitch helps MANY people!

     

    TENS OF THOUSANDS of people successfully use this app every day.

    Sometimes they may have a question about an alert or process, but that doesn't make the app useless.

    I had questions when I began using it and still do from time to time.

     

    Check out how many hundreds of thousands of posts there are in Adobe's forums and even right here in Apple's Communities with qusteions/problems related to the software.

    Does that make Adobe products and Apple software useless? If so, why are you using Apple software RIGHT NOW?  

     

    Guess some folks don't mind sending date to Apple even after the preferences are supposedly disabled.

    I've had Spotlight Suggestions and ALL Safari Search options disabled since I started using this computer 7 months ago. But SpotlightNetHelper still tries to contact Apple via smoot.apple.com dozens of times a day.

    Not to mention all the other processes unnecessarily contacting Apple all the time.

     

    And if they're truly necessary, then why does my computer, iTunes, iCloud etc. work just fine with so many blocked?

    Sure, they may need to contact Apple if I'm using FaceTime, iCloud, Find My Mac or iTunes Music Sharing. But I'm NOT, so those processes like identityservicesd, com.apple.geod.xpc and rtcreportingd need to keep their yaps shut!

     

    Apple, Google, Yahoo and others greatly appreciate those who freely give away their privacy and browsing information (as well as their IP address) by not installing privacy apps and browser junk blockers. So Linc, keep on doing as you have been, I'll be Google has quite a file on you.

  • by mhford1,

    mhford1 mhford1 Aug 11, 2016 3:56 PM in response to 9pines
    Level 1 (4 points)
    Aug 11, 2016 3:56 PM in response to 9pines

    I agree, and whether it's HW or SW based, an IDS is a pain at first, as You define "normal" network traffic, but once You dial it in, it's at great tool, to protect your data.  I provide Cyber Security Engineering support to the government on some of the highest classified networks in our nation.  Installing an IDS on those systems is basically Computer Security 101.  That's going all the way back to the basics.  I also teach Cyber Security classes at a University and I recommend to all my students to get a SW based IDS on their own home computers, whether they are MAC, PC or Linux.  It is an additional layer of Security.

  • by OregonRebel,

    OregonRebel OregonRebel Aug 11, 2016 9:59 PM in response to mhford1
    Level 1 (37 points)
    Mac OS X
    Aug 11, 2016 9:59 PM in response to mhford1

    Little Snitch isn't an intrusion detection system, it's a network monitor.

     

    Wikipedia defines an IDS as "a device or software application that monitors a network or systems for malicious activity or policy violations."

     

    Connections by Apple software to Apple aren't malicious or policy violations, they're part of the OS.

    But many LS users feel they're nosey, unnecessary and unwanted connections that unnecessarily consume bandwidth.

    LS is telling me that in the past 24 hours 65 connection attempts were blocked to api.smoot.apple.com.

     

    smoot.png

     

    Despite what some think, LS has legitimate uses beyond protection for pirated software.

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