

If you’re supporting users remotely with software like TeamViewer or similar, be aware that Screen Recording on macOS 11 now requires Administrator approval. Yes, that’s a UI alert for a kernel extension update, now slightly confusingly referred to in macOS Big Sur as a “System Extension”, too. Interestingly, Apple have not exempted themselves from that rule either, so you may see alerts for approving updates to kexts that live in /Library/Apple/System/Library/Extensions, too, like this: In Big Sur, all kernel extensions need user approval, including updated versions of existing kexts. You can find out more about SentinelOne’s kextless agent and support for Big Sur here. Kexts are not quite dead and buried and even live on in Apple’s own system software however, for 3rd party developers, the push to abandon kernel extensions from both Apple and users has been strong, and most vendors, including SentinelOne, are moving to the new System Extensions as replacement for kexts. However, if you’re running admin or security scripts that are checking the version number via the sw_vers command line tool your output should be like this: ProductName: macOS As the last version of macOS was 10.15, it’s not surprising that you’ll also see references to macOS as 10.16, even in some official documentation. This is the third time Apple have re-branded their desktop operating system in recent years, from OS X to macOS 10 and now we arrive at macOS 11. Adjust Your Scripts for the New Version Number While we covered some of these in our beta preview post back in June, we’ll also cover today some of the important changes since then.ġ. In this post, we take a tour of what’s new and how it affects security in the enterprise. Today, Apple releases the next iteration of its desktop operating system, now rebranded as macOS 11.
