How To Revoke App Specific Permission Mac

See your purchase history in the iTunes Store on a Mac or PC - http://support.apple.com/HT204088 - Does not include purchases made by others under Family Sharing; those have to be checked from their accounts.

  1. How To Revoke App Specific Permission Mac Download
  2. Google Revoke Permissions
  1. At any given time, you can have up to 25 active app-specific passwords. If you need to, you can revoke passwords individually or all at once. Sign in to your Apple ID account page. In the Security section, click Edit. In the App Specific Passwords section, click View History. Click next to a password you want to delete, or Revoke All.
  2. However, probably not every user pays attention to what permissions he grants which app. And some people may have simply forgotten that they allowed an app to access their email account at some point. Fortunately, you can revoke third-party app access to your Google account. Here’s what to do: Open the page myaccount.google.com in your browser.
  3. For any app that you revoke permission for, you can always give permission again in the future. Most of the information will sync with Google and you won't lose data anyway. You might have to rebuild task lists, or you might lose PDFs you saved to Google Drive using the app, but it shouldn't be too big of a process if you revoke an app.

Click the checkbox next to the app you want to deny permissions to. If the checkbox is greyed out, you may need to click the lock at the bottom left of the window before you can uncheck the box. 1 X Research source.


I included the hiding link because maybe she has hidden it. If she has not and it doesn't appear on the purchased list then she doesn't have it. Maybe she figured out some way to get a copy from a friend or something (not at all easy).


Take her phone from her and set parental restrictions on it with your passcode. Give the phone back to her.


As for more control:

If you grant a third-party app access to Gmail, you must expect the developer's staff to read your private messages. Check access rights now!

Björn GreifEditor

Blog

Earlier this week an article in the Wall Street Journal recalled a long-known problem and raised concern: Developers of third-party apps can read the emails of millions of Gmail users. What experts call “common practice” is called a “dirty secret” by the newspaper because not all users are aware of this fact.

According to the WSJ, Google does little to police those app developers whose machines and, in some cases, employees sift through “hundreds of millions of emails of users”. The report says:

One of those companies is Return Path Inc., which collects data for marketers by scanning the inboxes of more than two million people who have signed up for one of the free apps in Return Path’s partner network using a Gmail, Microsoft Corp. or Yahoo email address. Computers normally do the scanning, analyzing about 100 million emails a day. At one point about two years ago, Return Path employees read about 8,000 unredacted emails to help train the company’s software, people familiar with the episode say.

How To Revoke App Specific Permission Mac Download

And that is just one example the WSJ gives. There is no indication that developers of Gmail add-ons have misused data of users, the newspaper states. However, opening access to email data (including message content, subject and various metadata) is risky in general.

Google plays down the issue

To defend itself and to reassure its users, Google writes in a blog post that it only reads emails in “very specific cases”, for example to investigate a bug or abuse, and only if the person concerned consents. “We continuously work to vet developers and their apps that integrate with Gmail,” Google says. According to the internet giant, users always have control over which apps can access their Google and Gmail accounts since third-party apps require the user’s consent to access accounts.

Onedrive revoke app access

However, probably not every user pays attention to what permissions he grants which app. And some people may have simply forgotten that they allowed an app to access their email account at some point. Fortunately, you can revoke third-party app access to your Google account. Here’s what to do:

  1. Open the page myaccount.google.com in your browser.
  2. Sign in with your Google account.
  3. Click on „Apps with account access“ in the „Sign-in & security“ section.
  4. Under „Apps with account access“ select „Manage apps“. (Alternatively, you can directly follow this link and then sign in with your Google account.)
  5. On the “Apps with access to your account” screen you can now view which apps have access to what parts of your account and remove access.

Google Revoke Permissions

In general, it’s a good idea to check the list of apps that have access to your Google account regularly and to remove any that you no longer use. Ideally, before using an app or extension, you carefully consider what access rights you want to grant them.

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