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Sonos and macOS Permissions

  • 27 December 2021
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I am installing SONOS Application 13.4.1 on a macOS computer running Monterey 12.1.

I noticed during installation that SONOS requested permission to the computer’s Security&Privacy/Privacy/Accessibility setting, presumably, in order to control my computer.

I would appreciate an explanation as to what specific control or functionality SONOS would like access to in this regard so that I can determine whether to deny / grant it access.

Thank you.

 

 

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Best answer by James L. 27 December 2021, 16:33

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Sonos can play local music files which a stored on your Mac, so the Sonos devices would need access to those files over your local network.

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Hi @Joelc,

 

Sonos requests access to two permissions upon the first install for a couple of reasons which I’ll outline below:

 

Accessibility - Granting this permission lets you control Sonos through the Mac's keyboard media playback buttons for play/pause and forward/back. If you don’t use those buttons to control Sonos, you can deny this permission. If you do use these buttons or accidentally click deny, you will need to grant Sonos permission to access them.

Notifications - When notifications are allowed, Sonos will send desktop notifications to the Mac whenever a new track is played. Notifications can be toggled on or off in System Preferences > Notifications > Sonos.

 

I hope that helps.

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Sonos can play local music files which a stored on your Mac, so the Sonos devices would need access to those files over your local network.

Agreed but that is not the Accessibility permission, that would the the Files and Folders permission.

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Hi @Joelc,

 

Sonos requests access to two permissions upon the first install for a couple of reasons which I’ll outline below:

 

Accessibility - Granting this permission lets you control Sonos through the Mac's keyboard media playback buttons for play/pause and forward/back. If you don’t use those buttons to control Sonos, you can deny this permission. If you do use these buttons or accidentally click deny, you will need to grant Sonos permission to access them.

Notifications - When notifications are allowed, Sonos will send desktop notifications to the Mac whenever a new track is played. Notifications can be toggled on or off in System Preferences > Notifications > Sonos.

 

I hope that helps.

 

@James L. , I appreciate the detailed and fast response.  I have never used those buttons to control the Sonos but have now tried using them, very nice feature.

Again, thank you!

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One follow up, any way to get the Volume Keys (i.e. mine, down and up) to control the Sonos as well?

PS.  At least on my MacBook they do not control the volume.

 

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One follow up, any way to get the Volume Keys (i.e. mine, down and up) to control the Sonos as well?

PS.  At least on my MacBook they do not control the volume.

 

I’m not a Mac user, but I believe you can only do this if you’re Airplaying from the Mac to the Sonos speaker directly.

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One follow up, any way to get the Volume Keys (i.e. mine, down and up) to control the Sonos as well?

PS.  At least on my MacBook they do not control the volume.

 

I’m not a Mac user, but I believe you can only do this if you’re Airplaying from the Mac to the Sonos speaker directly.

 

@James L. appreciate the response.  

@ All, are there any mac users out there who can answer this?

Thanks.

The way the OS is written, the volume keys are designated for internal only. Even when the Mac client is “active”, the buttons still control the Mac’s volume, and not the Sonos volume. They would be active if you were using AirPlay, since you’re controlling a Mac OS application. But they’d be still interfacing with the operating system, and not the actual Sonos application.  

Not that I’ve looked particularly, but I’ve never seen anything out there that interrupts the communication between the keyboard and the OS, and redirects key presses to another application. I suppose such a thing is possible, but I’m not a programmer, so take what I say with a grain of “what the hell does some random person on the internet know, anyway!”.

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@Airgetlam , appreciate the response...I will settle for control of backward / pause or play / forward until someone figures out the use of the volume keys for the Sonos app...that said, it would be a great feature to have!  :)

Probably something Apple needs to open up before Sonos can use, but yep, it would be nice.