Whenever an app attempts to connect to a server on the Internet, Little Snitch shows a connection alert, allowing you to decide whether to allow or deny the connection. No data is transmitted without your consent. Your decision will be remembered and applied automatically in the future. Radio Silence’s network monitor shows you every network connection in real time. If you find a misbehaving app, you can block it with a single click. Radio Silence exposes everything. Find the hidden helpers and background processes apps use to make connections: Helper apps and executables; In-memory processes; Daemons, XPC services, and more. Aug 25, 2019 Just grab the output and copy/paste into Little Snitch. The script is written to block access to any process, any port. You can also delete those lines and it will only block Mail. Or use the options to enter any process, port or protocol you want to block.
Prey is installed under a separate user account (user: ‘prey’) on the system. In order to access its Little Snitch rules you have to open the Little Snitch Configuration as the user ‘prey’ by entering the following Terminal command (/Applications/Utilities/Terminal.app) and pressing Return:
sudo -u prey /Applications/Little Snitch Configuration.app/Contents/MacOS/Little Snitch Configuration
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After entering your admin password when prompted, you should be able to see the Little Snitch Configuration window with one or more rule suggestion(s) for the Prey process named “node“ in the Suggestions > “Login Connections“ category. Select one of the rules and click on the “More“ button at the top right of the suggestions list. In the appearing popup menu choose “Allow any connection“. After closing the Little Snitch Configuration and restarting your system, all connections for Prey will be allowed.