Maybe you (Thinine) aren't up-to-speed on all the technical changes in Sierra vs. Also a great read on 9to5mac's site.ĩto5mac's article on Sierra's treatment of expired certificates: ![]() The guys over at 1Password had a great blog on the subject. If a Developer's Certificate is not renewed (by the yearly timestamp, among some other technical behind the scenes activities) with Sierra, it will actually de-activate that App, where-as in El Capitan, the App will continue to run without issues. Sierra treats Apple Certificates different than El Capitan, and unless there is malicious code running on that "already approved App" for instance - from the Apps store, it doesn't need to be active. OCSPD does NOT need to be checking into Apple more than 3 times a day (which if you tracked the daemons' activities, it tends to do). I'm more of a "to each their own" type of person, but to call it stupid is over-the-top reaction-ism. Blocking ocspd, for example, is just stupid. ![]() ![]() Yes, they're rather important, some more than others.
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