![]() 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. But a clever reader has written in with a work-around! #Apple ![]() #macOS Sonoma up to and including 14.1 still has the issue where Privacy & Security permissions sometimes go missing at boot.
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