Currently, the new permissions are only available in the macOS Sierra app. However, Dropbox told Venturebeat that Mac OS X users will see similar changes in the coming weeks. "We realize this isn't a great experience," the company says on its support page. "We're actively working to make this better."

While it's generally understood that Dropbox requires deep hooks integrate its collaboration features on Apple machines, the old implementation wasn't clear about what it was doing. An unofficial dialog would pop up telling users the app needed their password "to work properly," when it was actually whitelisting itself in the Accessibility settings in an undocumented way.

Users were worried that Dropbox would be able to wipe their administrator passwords and open the door to malware. The company insists that's not the case and hopes that the new permissions and updated documentation clear up what the app will and won't do once it is installed.