DESCRIPTION
Little Snitch gives you control over your private outgoing data.
Track background activity
As soon as your computer connects to the Internet, applications often have permission to send any information wherever they need to. Little Snitch takes note of this activity and allows you to decide for yourself what happens with this data.
Control your network
Choose to allow or deny connections, or define a rule how to handle similar, future connection attempts. Little Snitch runs inconspicuously in the background and it can even detect network-related activity of viruses, trojans, and other malware.
What's New
Version 3.7:
Note: Version 4 is a paid upgrade from previous versions.
Improvements:
Made Silent Mode actually silent again. Starting in Little Snitch 4.0.5, processes with certain code signature issues caused Connection Alerts to appear even during Silent Mode. These appeared in more situations than we originally intended, though, so we redesigned how this works. Now, no Connection Alerts will appear during Silent Mode (as it was before Little Snitch 4.0.5), but you may see a notification in the top-right corner of the screen about connections being denied due to code signature issues.
Bug Fixes:
Improved reliability when handling responses to DNS requests delivered via TCP instead of UDP.
When changing the active profile using Little Snitch’s menu bar item while a Connection Alert was shown, the active profile’s name was not updated in the Connection Alert’s profile picker. This works as expected now. Note that the correct profile was used when creating a rule - just the name in the profile picker was not updated.
Fixed an issue that could cause Connection Alerts to appear that would show no host or domain names, but IP addresses. This could sometimes happen relatively early after starting the computer for a very small number of users.
Internet Access Policy:
Little Snitch is now smarter in figuring out what information in your app’s IAP is relevant for a particular connection. This results in more concise and more relevant information being shown to the user. This new behavior is documented here.
You can now specify that a connection description should match if and only if the user selects a connection for a whole domain or "any connection". You can find the documentation for this here.
Links in Markdown syntax now render correctly and show the linked URL as their tooltip.
Requirements
Intel, 64-bit processor
OS X 10.11 or later
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