- The exact message is one of those that appears in the link I posted: “This copy of the Install OS X El Capitan application can’t be verified. It may have been corrupted or tampered with during downloading”.
- Is not working with El Capitan yet?Thank you,William. Community content may not be verified or up-to-date. All Replies (34) 10/12/15.
- This copy of the Install OS X El Capitan application can't be verified. It may have been corrupted or tampered with during downloading. Posted by 5 years ago.
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Backup and Sync not working on OS El Capitan 10.11.6 since 1 week - missing symbol on a.dylb file. Community content may not be verified or up-to-date. El Capitan Desktop Support. Tried to dl Lion from App Store but get, Your device or computer could not be verified. Contact support for assistance.
One of the major changes in the macOS Sierra Public Beta isn’t an obvious one, and you may not encounter it until you try to install an app that you didn’t buy from the App Store.
In the Sierra Public Beta, Apple has changed the settings for running downloaded apps. If you really need to run that app and can’t figure out how, it can be frustrating. The settings are found in the General tab of the Security & Privacy system preference.
Note: This article was written for people using the Sierra Public Beta. When Apple released the final version of Sierra, it reverted the settings back to the way it works in El Capitan.
First, how it works in El Capitan
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To understand the changes, let’s look at what was offered before Sierra. Previously (or currently, if you’re not running Sierra), in El Capitan. the setting looked like this.
“Allow apps downloaded from” has three settings:
- Mac App Store: The Mac will only run apps downloaded from the Mac App Store.
- Mac App Store and identified developers: When you try to open a new app and it’s not on the list of identified developers that’s saved within the operating system, the Mac tells you it can’t open it. To open the app, you have to go to System Preferences > Security & Privacy, and click the Open Anyway button that appears in the General tab.
- Anywhere: You’ll see a notification that says the new app you want to open was downloaded from the internet, and you need to confirm that you want to open it.
The change in the macOS Sierra Public Beta
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The major change is that Apple removed the Anywhere setting. If you had this setting selected in El Capitan and you’ve upgraded to the Sierra beta, you won’t be able to open downloaded apps like you’re used to.
If you want to open an app that you didn’t buy in the Mac App Store and instead downloaded it from a developer on the internet, there are two way for opening the app.
The quick way to open an unidentified, downloaded app in the Sierra beta
- After you download the app and move it to your Applications folder, right-click on it and select Open.
- After you select Open, you will see a warning that’s similar to the one below. Click OK to open the app.Sierra adds the developer to its internal list of identified developers so you can open other apps from the same developer.
The long way to open an unidentified, downloaded app in the Sierra beta
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- After you download the app and move it to your Applications folder, launch it. You will see a warning like this one:Click OK. This does not open the app. It simply returns you to the Finder.
- Go to Apple menu > System Preferences, and then click on the Security & Privacy icon.
- Under the General tab, look in the setting for “Allow apps downloaded from” and you should see that the app you tried to open was noticed by the operating system. Click the Open Anyway button to open that new app.Sierra will then note the developer and add it to its internal list of identified developers. If you download a different app from the same developer, Sierra will look for the developer on the list and if it sees the developer, the new app will open.
We have an iMac that is barely still compatible with El Capitan. Right now it runs Mountain Lion okay, and actually it has a smaller partition on the hard drive for another clean installation of Mountain Lion that we don't really use.
I have an El Capitan boot USB drive and an El Capitan install app, and I was thinking about using one of those to upgrade the clean install partition to El Capitan to see how it performs, but I'm hesitant and want to make sure things wouldn't be messed up.
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So first of all, does this sound like a good idea? Second, would it be better to boot into the USB drive and choose to install to the clean install partition or should I put the install app on the clean install's Application's folder and run it from there?
Also would doing this risk causing the Mountain Lion restore partition to be deleted? Are there risks of things being messed up, not being able to make Mountain Lion the default boot partition, or other weird things El Capitan would do to the main partition?