

Click OK and quit Adobe Digital Editions. Hopefully this gets worked out before Mojave ships as it seriously impacts automation capabilities on macOS. Press Cmd-Shift-D to deauthorize Adobe Digital Editions.

Others have written up more extensive information about this: streamlined automation requires some type of mechanism to have the permissions granted a priori an example would be utilizing AppleScript with Ansible and being unable to preload grants.the implementation of requesting permission for the scripting action appears to be bugged I've run other scripts that request permission to send events to Safari and the Finder doesn't prompt for permission, it just returns an error.There's two issues that I see at the moment: If you allow it, then terminal will get added to the Automation page in System Preferences > Security & Privacy > Automation: What is supposed to happen on the first execution is the Finder opens a dialog box informing you that terminal is requesting permission to send events to the Finder. If the book does not open in Adobe Digital Print, try one of the following: Start Learn Digital Editions, click File > Add to Library and browse to the book you want to open in Adobe Digital.
#ADOBE DIGITAL EDITIONS UNABLE TO ERASE AUTHORIZATION MAC SOFTWARE#
In terminal try osascript -e 'tell application "Finder"' -e 'set _b to bounds of window of desktop' -e 'end tell'Īnd you may receive: 36:42: execution error: Not authorized to send Apple events to Finder. When you download a book from a library or buy an e-mail, free the book from the Browser software opening and the book opens in Adobe Digital Editions. This is definitely a part of Mojave's new security framework.
