The "anyone" option disappeared, I believe, with High Sierra. It's not in Mojave, in any case. As above, just right/control click on whatever you're trying to open, and choose "open" and then confirm that's what you're trying to do.How does one bypass mac os 10.15 security on opening 3rd party apps that are not identified? It seems Apple left out in the Security and Privacy preference "Anyone" for opening apps and/or installing them.
This terminal command brings back the option to "open anywhere" although some things still don't seem to open.
sudo spctl --master-disable
How does one bypass mac os 10.15 security on opening 3rd party apps that are not identified? It seems Apple left out in the Security and Privacy preference "Anyone" for opening apps and/or installing them.
I agree with you but couldn't get it to work 10.15.beta 2. Maybe a bug.The "anyone" option disappeared, I believe, with High Sierra. It's not in Mojave, in any case. As above, just right/control click on whatever you're trying to open, and choose "open" and then confirm that's what you're trying to do.
That worked. Thank you.This terminal command brings back the option to "open anywhere" although some things still don't seem to open.
sudo spctl --master-disable