View Full Version : Safari download warning. TURN IT OFF, DAMMIT!
zen
Apr 30, 2005, 01:01 AM
Hmm...Tiger rules except...
Safari gives a warning dialog that must be okayed if you download a file which is/contains an application. This is a major annoyance - if I download a dmg, I know what is on it, thank-you very much!
There appears to be no preference for turning it off. Anyone had any luck, or is this for 10.4.1?
Zen
slb
Apr 30, 2005, 01:03 AM
It's a logical security precaution in this day and age. Doesn't bother me. I'm not really downloading DMGs all the time.
wrc fan
Apr 30, 2005, 01:21 AM
if you change the preferences to not open safe files after downloading you won't get it.
daveL
Apr 30, 2005, 01:09 PM
So, now we complain that Tiger tries to make sure you don't inadvertently launch a trojan. No joy for some.
Sleix
Apr 30, 2005, 01:27 PM
So, now we complain that Tiger tries to make sure you don't inadvertently launch a trojan. No joy for some.
Well, considering it's what I call the "Stupid Box"...yah, I don't have any joy for it. :rolleyes:
I mean, only a fool wouldn't look or know what he or she is downloading by looking at the obvious webpage information at hand...
Hemingray
Apr 30, 2005, 01:33 PM
So, now we complain that Tiger tries to make sure you don't inadvertently launch a trojan. No joy for some.
I think they should have at least included a "don't show me this again" checkbox and have an option to turn it on/off in preferences.
At least they made "Continue" the default button!
daveL
Apr 30, 2005, 01:46 PM
Well, considering it's what I call the "Stupid Box"...yah, I don't have any joy for it. :rolleyes:
I mean, only a fool wouldn't look or know what he or she is downloading by looking at the obvious webpage information at hand...
I hear you, but think about Joe Average user, that's all I'm saying. Someone launches a trojan by accident and the press is all over it: Mac OS X not as secure ... blah, blah, blah. Better safe than sorry. And, as wrc_fan said, you *can* turn it off; you'll just have to open the d/l yourself.
Sleix
Apr 30, 2005, 02:35 PM
I hear you, but think about Joe Average user, that's all I'm saying. Someone launches a trojan by accident and the press is all over it: Mac OS X not as secure ... blah, blah, blah. Better safe than sorry. And, as wrc_fan said, you *can* turn it off; you'll just have to open the d/l yourself.
True...but I still wouldn't mind the automation, still...just add one small option to bypass the "captain obvious" remarks, and I'd be cool with it... :cool:
TigerPRO
Apr 30, 2005, 03:28 PM
I hear you, but think about Joe Average user, that's all I'm saying. Someone launches a trojan by accident and the press is all over it: Mac OS X not as secure ... blah, blah, blah. Better safe than sorry. And, as wrc_fan said, you *can* turn it off; you'll just have to open the d/l yourself.
Yes, but the point of this thread isn't that it shouldn't be on by default, the point is that there should be an option to turn it off.
R.Youden
Apr 30, 2005, 03:34 PM
I agree that it is damn annoying. They should at least give you a warning. All I was trying to do is download an icon!
makey
Apr 30, 2005, 03:53 PM
Although anoying, browser security is needed these days. I am surprised there is not an option to shut it off though.
igucl
Apr 30, 2005, 03:54 PM
Really annoying. Are they trying to be more and more like Windows? Also, all of the system preferences used to be active the moment you changed them, but now some of them require you to hit an "apply" button. What is going on? If they want to take tips from Microsoft, the least they could do is choose some of their scarce good ideas.
David Lundgren
May 1, 2005, 09:04 AM
<<Really annoying. Are they trying to be more and more like Windows?>>
No, they're trying to prevent the Windows experience of applications "sneaking" onto the computer. If Windows did this, spyware, malware and viruses would largely go away. For crying out loud, it's one mouse click.
Also, anyone who doesn't think that someday someone may figure out how to get that first virus onto the Mac, despite the UNIX core, is kidding themselves. All the Mac superiority about no viruses goes out the window the first time that happens, and this has everything to do with preventing it.
Do you want to read Paul Thurrot's column about the Death of the Mac and Windows Reigns Supreme the day after that happens? Not me!
mainstreetmark
May 1, 2005, 11:41 AM
You all are missing the point.
The point is not "there should be no Warning", it's "there should be a way for the advanced users who know what the hell they're doing to turn it off".
One mouse click is too much. I often download dmg's (for example, AdiumX's beta which updates almost daily) and I click the download and let it go. Some time later, I notice the mounted image on my desktop is all ready to go.
For crying out loud, it's not like it's autolaunching the application here. The user still has to go around and open the application and even THEN, the user will be asked for a password if the trojan intends to honk something up.
A nice checkbox would be welcome. "Thanks, Safari, I know that there's an application in this application that i'm downloading. please don't warn me again"
cleo
May 8, 2005, 01:55 PM
Just bumping this up to see if, in the week since the last post, any workarounds have been found to kill the warning but still automagically open whatever it is you downloaded.
I have a habit of going on icon rampages about once every two months. I open all my (very well-known and trusted) icon sites in tabs, then go through them, sometimes downloading 200 icon sets in an hour. And when I'm done, I have folders neatly lined up on my desktop with all of the .dmg's and .zip's extracted.
And then there was Tiger. I never imagined an "improvement" would make working on my Mac more cumbersome! I suppose an Automator workflow could be devised, but it really shouldn't be up to us!
Anyway, </rant>. Any of you smart people figured anything out?
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