Releaselog

Objective Development Little Snitch v2.0.2 Mac OSX-CFF

Here’s new version of this popular application for Mac users. Little Snitch is must have security application.

Description:

As soon as you’re connected to the Internet, applications can potentially send whatever information they want to wherever they want.

Sometimes they do this for good reason, on your explicit request. But often they don’t. Little Snitch allows you to intercept these unwanted connection attempts, and lets you decide how to proceed.

Little Snitch informs you whenever a program attempts to establish an outgoing Internet connection. You can then choose to allow or deny this connection, or define a rule how to handle similar, future connection attempts. This reliably prevents private data from being sent out without your knowledge. Little Snitch runs inconspicuously in the background and it can also detect network related activity of viruses, trojans and other malware.

Release Name: Objective.Development.Little.Snitch.v2.0.2.MacOSX-CFF
Size: 2.97MB
Links: Homepage, NFO
Download: Rapidshare.com, Mirrors

Comments (38)

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  1. nnn
    March 16th, 2008 | 13:11

    wow, you mean like a firewall? exactly like a firewall?

  2. Marduk
    March 16th, 2008 | 13:13
  3. MikeH
    March 16th, 2008 | 13:16

    @1:
    It’s more like ZoneAlarm than a pure firewall, because it monitors at the application level rather than just at the network level. It’s also aimed more for interactive authorisation of outgoing connections rather than blocking incoming – again a subtle difference, but a difference nonetheless.

  4. JackOfNoTrade MasterOfNothing
    March 16th, 2008 | 13:20

    Thanks for this post, I was really looking for this yesterday and magically it appeared here in RLSLOG. I hope the MAC stuffs would be posted here now and then.

  5. mynameis
    March 16th, 2008 | 13:35

    Thank you! Nice one.

  6. mbdc
    March 16th, 2008 | 13:37

    Thankyou. Good App

  7. K
    March 16th, 2008 | 14:04

    Good to see more and more Mac apps being posted here :)

    Little Snitch is fantastic software, and is essentially existent to stop applications ‘phoning home’ without you knowing. It’s more than a firewall for that very reason- controlling easily what apps send outbound traffic, etc. – great app!

    Also note that whilst it might share some functions with Zone Alarm, it is in no way to be considered ‘like’, because it is not resource-intensive, and doesn’t hog your system and startup like ZA does! :)

  8. Anonpuss
    March 16th, 2008 | 14:14

    good post, but strange it has a scene release. 2.0.2 is available from the developer’s site for a long time and serialbox had the serial for a while.

    anyhow, it’s not really a firewall, osx has one, but it’s a very usefull app to stop applications from phoning home.

  9. luzif3r
    March 16th, 2008 | 14:19

    well what are the alternatives to zone alarm for windows users?

  10. nnn
    March 16th, 2008 | 14:24

    interesting… thanks for the clarification

  11. best
    March 16th, 2008 | 14:33
  12. wibble
    March 16th, 2008 | 15:06

    @9

    Try NetLimiter 2 Pro

  13. GT
    March 16th, 2008 | 15:13

    @9. luzif3r

    the greatest alternative to zonealarm is comodo firewall pro, in fact it’s better than ZA. what’s more… it’s a freeware

    check,
    http://www.personalfirewall.comodo.com/

  14. JoJo
    March 16th, 2008 | 15:20

    i hope this program is useful for me… thx though

  15. just a splash of ginseng
    March 16th, 2008 | 16:05

    this is useless because there are no viruses, and spyware on the mac

  16. tommy
    March 16th, 2008 | 16:39

    @15 , “just a splash of ginseng”
    That information is not totally true , there is viruses for Mac , Unix , Linux and WINDOWS
    The problem is 99% are made for WINDOWS , that means you better off sticking with the 1% ;-)

  17. Nocturne
    March 16th, 2008 | 16:57

    Mac´s don´t have viruses. Not that I have heard of. You windows users are stuck with all kinds of protection because Windows is inferior to Mac´s beautiful design, management, flexibility and resources. I was very, very reluctant to switch to a Mac after being a windows user since I can remember, but when Mac apps open windows-designed documents as easy as their own, I was sold. No more windows for me. Ever.

    Anywho, I might just DL this to see what it´s all about.. :D

  18. Bob
    March 16th, 2008 | 17:14

    Some of you dont really understand the point of this.
    It has nothing to do with viruses or spyware.

    The point is using hacked software so when it tries to call home IE Adobe, you block it.. or if you’re using FCP and FCP wants to tell Apple somewhere along the way, you block it..

  19. Milo
    March 16th, 2008 | 17:23

    “it can also detect network related activity of viruses, trojans and other malware”

    Well no it can’t, since there are 0 (zero) viruses for OS X at this moment. There’s only been one virus in OS X ever, and that’s Leap.A.

    LittleSnitch isn’t for viruses, trojans and such. It’s for leting you know what applications connect to something, and why.

  20. Stefanovich
    March 16th, 2008 | 17:25

    Put it this way, you’ve just downloaded a copy of photoshop and entered the wrong serial number. The application tries to connect home to basically report your piracy. Little snitch informs you of the outbound connection and lets you block it. Gives you more control over what’s happening on your computer at an application level.

  21. R5
    March 16th, 2008 | 17:34
  22. funkyj44
    March 16th, 2008 | 17:43

    @20 exactly,thank you. it was painful reading some of these comments.

  23. klark kent
    March 16th, 2008 | 18:07

    Why would macs need an application like this? According to the smug, self congratulatory tv commercials, absolutely everything runs exactly as planned 100% of the time without so much as a sneeze.

    Waste of money!

  24. WayOut
    March 16th, 2008 | 18:11
  25. golfpro
    March 16th, 2008 | 18:31

    @klark kent: Can’t you read? Geezzzz.

  26. steveo
    March 16th, 2008 | 18:36

    erm… get the demo from objective development and use a serial thats in ’serial box’

    (dont forget to bloack the actual app from phoning home;)

    Little Snitch 2.0.2:

    Serial: 32RP2EDXN0-719GP-KRRU76R15E

    Thanks to the Special [K] Team

    [code]http://www.obdev.at/ftp/pub/Products/LittleSnitch/LittleSnitch_2.0.2.dmg[/code]

    [quote]Reposted in case it gets buried in the Little Snitch thread or it get’s archived in the future.

    [b]Avoid Little Snitch 2.0 Calling Home[/b]
    After a few reboots, I found only 1 file needs to be blocked, the others 3 files installed [b]will[/b] cause side effects you don’t want if blocked.

    Block all outgoing connections to [b]Little Snitch UIAgent.app[/b] only

    [b]You can find it in the System Process’ stack when you open up Activity Monitor.[/b]
    [img]http://i13.tinypic.com/8f5jcc8.png[/img]

    P.s. Just quote this message and copy/paste parts of it if you wanna share these notes & picture elsewhere as a warning to others.[/quote]

  27. Goobimama
    March 16th, 2008 | 18:50

    LittleSnitch is only needed if you don’t want your apps to phone home with your cracked serial. Otherwise for protection purposes, the Leopard Firewall is more than enough. In fact, with the new Leopard Firewall, you can pretty much block access the same way LS does. Only LS is a little more geared towards blocking outgoing connections…

  28. Cromwell
    March 16th, 2008 | 19:18

    I think monitoring outbound traffic is very important, regardless of the OS one uses. Especially if one also uses pirated software! Never know what might be “phoning home” these days. Better safe than sorry, right?

    @13 GT: Thanks for the link! Never heard of Comodo before. I’ve been using Kerio 2.1.x for what feels like an eternity. Comodo looks like a fantastic free replacement, and it even works with Vista (not that I’d ever use Vista lol).

    Perhaps you can answer a quick question. Does it support wildcards when entering IP addresses? Didn’t see anything in the PDF manual regarding this. This is something Outpost Firewall Pro does, a program which costs money that I’ve also been looking into.

    Thanks again! :)

  29. Robby
    March 16th, 2008 | 19:29

    FYI: the built-in firewall in OS X is disabled by default (and it’s the same allow/deny system).

  30. Goujon
    March 16th, 2008 | 19:55

    I’m pretty sure that you MODS, should make a different category for Mac Apps. I used to view all category content at once pressing “Applications” cat link instead of doing that from front page. Since Mac Apps are there too it’s a little confusing and inconvinient.

  31. GeorG
    March 16th, 2008 | 22:17

    Thanks for the Mac app. Been using Little Snitch for quite sometime and its amazing how much software wants to interrupt your work by calling home and announcing some kind of update that you don’t need or want. Once Little Snitch has learned all of your preferences, it runs invisibly in the background. Very useful…

  32. dotty
    March 16th, 2008 | 22:56

    OS X has a firewall, by default it’s off. However you can enable it, this acts like a basic firewall; stopping incoming traffic to your system.

    However, little snitch gives you a better application to monitor network connections. Little snitch allows applications to access what urls/resources you provide and block the rest.

    Oh, a heads up. If you download this, to avoid little snitch “phoning home” you need to block access to little snitch UI. To do this do the following…
    1) load up little snitch configurations
    2)click new
    3)add HD:library:little snitch:little snitch UI
    4)choose deny connections and choose always.

    Little snitch will no long be able to check against pirated serials.

    enjoy this cracking program.

  33. anon
    March 16th, 2008 | 23:01

    thanks for the mac stuff

  34. MAXp0wr
    March 16th, 2008 | 23:36

    Keep the Mac stuff coming!

    This app is very useful, thanks for the heads up and link.

  35. tommy
    March 17th, 2008 | 00:46

    Thank you Steveo
    You the man , btw I watched all your Jackass movies , they rock

  36. The_Doctor
    March 17th, 2008 | 10:12

    @Nocturne

    He is right, their are viruses for Linux and Mac, actually, any Linux virus would essentially run on mac also, especially something for BSD. Anyways, most of them are rootkits, and the reason you don’t see as many isn’t due to the normal thought of, no one uses a mac so why bother targeting them, yet if you got a mass virus out for Mac, you would do a LOT of damage.

    Here is the issue with a virus on mac, you HAVE to rely on social engineering, and extensive social engineering at that. YOu can’t do just the trick of open this e-mail greeting card or got to this website for free porn. Mac, just like Linux REQUIRES your root password to install and run anything that modifies with the kernel and system files or tries to run as a server process (in basic terms). No one runs as “root”, so it can’t be automatic. Now you have to get them to go to the site, get the virus, and go oh, ok, I will type in my password also.

    It has been done, but only on a small scale, most users know what is going to happen if an unknown program wants root access. Windows doesn’t have that level of protection really, you can set the security policies to require an admin login, but that is a pain. So, with windows poof, you got the virus. So, not a matter of how may users, more of a matter of “effectiveness” no one wants to write a virus that only gets 2% of all users.

  37. Ativerb
    March 17th, 2008 | 11:15

    Any chance someone can crack the latest version of Altiverb. That one will make my life complete. :D

  38. NDH
    March 17th, 2008 | 13:33

    Does something likes this also for linux exist?

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