Of course that begs the question, of Apple using terminology everyone.
I am not sure what your statement means. I believe my elementary school English teacher would have called that an incomplete sentence
However, because the bad guys keep getting smarter and more determined, Apple continues to harden the system and that almost inevitably results in some inconvenience.
Titanium has Maintenance. I tried to open it, but after what 20 years, Titanium is still not trusted?
It may be Titanium believes it would be too expensive to comply with Apple's requirements to become an
identified developer for a product they are giving away or it may be that although Titanium products are basically a GUI front end for OS X command line operations there are some of those functions Apple would prefer not be in the hands of uninformed users and chooses not to grant
recognized developer status to Titanium. (Notice there are no Titanium products available through the App Store.) You can still install those apps and they still work, but Apple wants you to at least pause and think before using. There are a lot of apps from unrecognized developers that use
deprecated commands perhaps even commands that have not been fully tested — permission repair is a case in point. If you run a Maintain or OnyX command which bricks your system it is your fault for using an app from an unrecognized developer and the developer's fault for using a deprecated or not fully tested command and not readily available to the general user population, but it is NOT Apple's fault and they have no liability.