MacOS refused to run the installer on Sequoia. Signing it is not all that hard.
Don't you have to pay an annual fee to Apple to sign software? It looks like they have a fee waiver program but for some reason it doesn't cover open source or even let an individual person apply at all: https://developer.apple.com/support/fee-waiver/
I'm not sure it is reasonable to demand that open source devs pay a fee to Apple so that you don't have to right-click the app and whitelist it...
I thinks it's very reasonable. They provide an important security service, also the windows equivalent is many hundreds of dollars per year, per application, vs $99 per year which would cover any number of applications.
My comment was about whether it is reasonable for random people to demand open source devs pay a platform fee, not about whether the fee itself is reasonable.
Quoting the last line of my comment again with added emphasis in case it was confusing:
> I'm not sure it is reasonable *to demand that open source devs pay a fee to Apple* so that you don't have to right-click the app and whitelist it...
It has nothing to do with open source, it's about security. Installing an app with no connection to anything invites lots of people to build apps that steal your stuff (sure this app might be trustworthy, but not all). Every Mac and iOS developer has the same requirements. Installing an app with no signature is asking for people to get hacked. Do you leave your house open so that some contractor you don't know can enter your house and do whatever they please? $99 a year means Apple can trust that they at least know who the contractor is. There are people who want to steal your stuff (or your mom's) much smarter than you or I. This isn't an onerous requirement at all. I shipped my first Mac app in 1987, back then security was not an issue. It is today.
It really is for some developers. $99 goes a long way in some places, and not everybody has a credit card either.
Also, how does paying $99 mean that Apple “knows who you are”? It identifies you as somebody willing to spend $99, nothing more. I bet that’s not a problem at all for many bad actors.
You can right-click and run from the context menu, in which case it should start. Contributions are welcomed.
Not on Sequoia / Lockdown Mode. Signing is not that hard indeed
Much like all previous versions of MacOS: settings -> privacy and security -> click "open anyway". No need for open source to give in to Apple's signing demands.
In Lockdown mode there's only: "App Store" and "App Store & Known Developers".
There is no "open anyway" button when using Lockdown mode.
edit: interestingly the button suddenly appeared. Perhaps you need to keep the privacy&setting screen open.
Possibly:
> This button is available for about an hour after you try to open the app.
https://support.apple.com/guide/mac-help/open-a-mac-app-from...
You get that option only when an application gets blocked, and it doesn't hang around forever (nor does it stack, you don't get multiple options if you try to run multiple blocked apps): you have to click it when it's relevant, and if you don't, it disappears after a short while.
Same problem here. Also on Seqouia
Apple changed this to be a little more annoying with Sequoia: System Settings > Privacy & Security > "Security" heading > "Open Anyway" button.
- https://support.apple.com/guide/mac-help/open-a-mac-app-from...
I use it all the time on Sonoma OS with no problems. I have yet to upgrade to Sequoia due to the numerous reported problems on Reddit.