![]() It would make sense to have the option to hide the Screen Recording Menu Bar icon for certain apps that you allow without having to look at it up there all of the time. Whereas AltTab is an important application that lets me utilize AltTab similar to Windows operating systems, which is a good system. This is a problem because the purpose of Bartender 4 is to re-organize and expand on what the Menu Bar is capable of doing, showing, etc. "This is on all displays, MacOS Sonoma forces the icon that tells you that your screen is being recorded, AltTab and Bartender 4 utilize the screen recording feature in certain ways for the application to work as intended, or to work at all. The biggest mystery about this for me is whether this is a side-effect of some peculiar aspect of my Mac’s setup, or if this is an issue that is affecting everyone using apps that require Accessibility permissions on their Mac.I went ahead and submitted feedback for the Mac OS Beta with these contents, and I would love for you to do the same. I really hope Apple fixes this (assuming it’s their bug) soon!Īre you seeing some version of this issue on your Mac? Please reach out and let me know. I’ve steadily gotten used to a reboot of my Mac taking 30 minutes out of my day while I sort out broken macOS permissions. Surprisingly, when I do this, after rebooting I find that all my previously-approved applications are back in the list! So however this file works, there does seem to be an underlying “source of truth” that doesn’t get clobbered in this process. What has worked for me is to delete the ~/Library/Preferences/.plist file and reboot. ![]() ![]() ![]() When this happens, it’s time to get the big hammer. I’ve had success with doing this for all apps at once: tccutil reset AccessibilityĪfter running the necessary command(s) and rebooting, the applications will prompt for the access they need again, but this time you’ll be able to add them back into the list of approved applications successfully again.Įvery now and then, however, an even worse manifestation of this issue may see you looking at a blank list of approved applications in Privacy & Security settings, with every attempt to add an application back onto the list failing silently: The scary blank list Bartender advises users to open Terminal and use the tccutil utility to reset permissions. This issue is widespread enough that some of these applications have help pages on their support sites with advice on how to resolve the problem when it occurs. When this happens, the apps are still listed as approved in Privacy & Security, and toggling their permissions on and off doesn’t help, nor does removing the apps from the list entirely and re-adding them. There seems to be a way that the database for an entire section of the Privacy & Security settings (most commonly Accessibility) can become corrupt, and all the apps that rely on it will be locked out. That doesn’t always do the trick, though. I believe this because the easiest way to resolve the issue, often, is to quit and restart the app that is complaining that it lacks permissions. The bug seems to be a race condition of some kind, where applications request the access they’ve already been granted before macOS has finished bringing the necessary services online, so the app thinks it has lost its permissions. Sadly, #macOS Ventura 13.2 seems no better at remembering the apps I granted Accessibility, Full Disk Access, and Screen Recording permissions to when I reboot.
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