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Remove the erase disk option on the finder macOS Sequoia

Updated to macOS Sequoia today and saw that when right clicking on a connected hard drive on the desktop, it shows the option to erase it under the eject option. I find it very very dangerous because it makes it very easy to click it by accident or even clicked by someone else (a child for example) and erase a drive with important content inside.


Is it possible to remove that option from this right click menu somehow? I also find it useless because most people don't erase their drives so often to need that option so easily accessible...

MacBook Pro 14″, macOS 15.0

Posted on Sep 16, 2024 6:46 PM

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Question marked as Top-ranking reply

Posted on Sep 26, 2024 1:40 PM

Placing Erase Disk next to Eject Disk is a really bad idea. I wonder how this got thru beta without any feedback. I like the idea of having the Erase disk option in the menu. It just needs to be placed far away from the most commonly used menu item Eject Disk. I hope Apple is listening.

24 replies

Sep 29, 2024 6:41 PM in response to Cmd_Bluffnsuch

Edit: this was supposed to be a reply to the person suggesting to use the terminal as a solution. I don't use the forums often and thought this response would appear under theirs.

These are your options:

I prefer Newest so I can easily see what has changed.

I think "threaded" was excommunicated when they went to a popularity contest instead of utility.

Your post has a link to the replied comment.


Why do you consider a solution that does not create consternation in your inability to click an item "rage bait." If you accidentally click the wrong item, just click cancel or hit return (the default on all data loss dialogs is cancel).


You could use that option to create a Shortcut with a Quick Action to put the Erase Disk command pretty much outside the Eject Disk solar system (computer-wise).

Sep 16, 2024 8:47 PM in response to Simos805

Simos805 wrote:

Updated to macOS Sequoia today and saw that when right clicking on a connected hard drive on the desktop, it shows the option to erase it under the eject option. I find it very very dangerous because it makes it very easy to click it by accident or even clicked by someone else (a child for example) and erase a drive with important content inside.

Is it possible to remove that option from this right click menu somehow? I also find it useless because most people don't erase their drives so often to need that option so easily accessible...


Then don't "right" click on the connected drive.


If you want to unmount, drag it to the trash can or use the Terminal.app



MacBook-Pro ~ % diskutil umount /Volumes/Untitled

Volume Untitled on disk3s1 unmounted


Sep 26, 2024 2:22 PM in response to mls2k3

Placing Erase Disk next to Eject Disk is a really bad idea. I wonder how this got thru beta without any feedback. I like the idea of having the Erase disk option in the menu. It just needs to be placed far away from the most commonly used menu item Eject Disk. I hope Apple is listening.

I have never used the contextual menu to eject my drives. I hardly ever eject a drive. So, I never tested it. However, the Erase command right next to it doesn't bother me. It has a confirmation dialog.

If that bothers you, try this one: Drag your disk to the Trash.

Sep 26, 2024 7:38 PM in response to seaandnature

seaandnature wrote:

This is so far from Apple's own Human Interface Guidelines.

Nobody pays attention to that, least of all Apple.

I cannot in the least understand how some here can defend something so obviously silly with arguments like 'then don't use it' or 'I don't use it, so neither should you'.

Defend? I spend all year wasting keystrokes lecturing people about how they don’t need to install every update the nanosecond it’s released. Then the “big update” shows up and people absolutely freak out when Apple changes something, or adds something, in the new operating system. You don’t like change? Don’t apply the update every year! Geez!

Oct 29, 2024 4:33 PM in response to Simos805

Does seem pretty odd. At least there's a confirmation dialogue (I assume, from Etresoft's comment, not one I'd be keen on testing!)


Rename showing and truncating the actual disk name is daft too - maybe that's been there a while but it just clutters the contextual menu without need.


Having had to boot into Big Sur earlier I was quite surprised by how much nicer the icons were, much the same as when the skeuomorphic ones got replaced by 'flat' ones.


The ecosystem is fantastic but the GUI seems to go backwards quite often for change's sake and nothing else.

Remove the erase disk option on the finder macOS Sequoia

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