In case anyone's interested, I tracked down my original source for these 
entitlement keys:

I got this from the WWDC2012 video entitled "The OS X App Sandbox". At 
time-stamp 39:48 they show a slide which details the new use of access groups 
and the recommended way of talking between apps in Mountain Lion. The following 
slide at time-stamp 40:05 contains exactly the contents of my entitlements 
plist.

So it seems ironic that I'm being rejected for using something directly from an 
Apple video (unless I've done my visual copy-and-paste wrong - checking now).

Martin

On 29, Oct, 2012, at 07:45 PM, Martin Hewitson <[email protected]> 
wrote:

> 
> On 29, Oct, 2012, at 07:27 PM, "Stephen J. Butler" <[email protected]> 
> wrote:
> 
>> On Mon, Oct 29, 2012 at 12:49 PM, Martin Hewitson
>> <[email protected]> wrote:
>>> But com.apple.security.scripting-targets is not a temporary entitlement, is 
>>> it? I thought this was the recommended way of communicating between apps in 
>>> the new era.
>> 
>> But this part clearly is:
>> 
>>  <key>com.apple.security.temporary-exception.apple-events</key>
>>  <array>
>>    <string>com.apple.mail</string>
>>  </array>
> 
> 
> Indeed, but the message says this the error is in:
> 
> com.apple.security.scripting-targets: {u'com.apple.Mail': 
> [u'com.apple.Mail.compose']}
> 
> Unless the error message is wrong?
> 
> And again, I'm relatively sure the 2012 WWDC video suggests that this is the 
> correct way to go about sending emails on 10.7. But I will be looking at that 
> video again closely, when I get a chance.
> 
> Martin
> 
> 








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