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New gov't rules allow unapproved iPhone apps

Posted by Marine59 , in Political Comments 26 July 2010 · 12 views

By JOELLE TESSLER
AP Technology Writer

Owners of the iPhone  will be able to legally unlock their devices so they can run software  applications that haven't been approved by Apple Inc., according to new  government rules announced Monday.

The  decision to allow the practice commonly known as "jailbreaking" is one  of a handful of new exemptions from a 1998 federal law that prohibits  people from bypassing technical measures that companies put on their  products to prevent unauthorized use of copyright-protected material.  The Library of Congress, which oversees the Copyright Office, reviews  and authorizes exemptions every three years to ensure that the law does  not prevent certain non-infringing uses of copyright-protected works.

For  iPhone jailbreakers, the new rules effectively legitimize a practice  that has been operating in a legal gray area by exempting it from  liability. Apple claims that jailbreaking is an unauthorized  modification of its software.

Mario Ciabarra,  founder of Rock Your Phone, which calls itself an "independent iPhone  application store," said the rules mark the first step toward opening  the iPhone app market to competition and removing the "handcuffs" that  Apple imposes on developers that want to reach users of the wildly  popular device.

Unless users unlock their  handsets, they can only download apps from Apple's iTunes store.  Software developers must get such apps pre-approved by Apple, which  sometimes demands changes or rejects programs for what developers say  are vague reasons.

Ciabarra noted that Google  Inc. has taken a different approach with its Android operating system,  which is emerging as the biggest competitor to the iPhone. Google allows  users of Android phones to download applications from outside the  Android Market.

Although Apple has never  prosecuted anyone for jailbreaking, it does use software upgrades to  disable jailbroken phones, and the new government rules won't put a stop  to that. That means owners of such phones might not be able to take  advantage of software improvements, and they still run the risk of  voiding their warranty.

Apple spokesman  Natalie Kerris said Monday that the company is concerned about  jailbreaking because the practice can make an iPhone unstable and  unreliable.

"Apple's goal has always been to  ensure that our customers have a great experience with their iPhone, and  we know that jailbreaking can severely degrade the experience," she  said.

In addition to jailbreaking, other exemptions announced Monday would:

- allow owners of used cell phones to break access controls on their phones in order to switch wireless carriers.

- allow people to break technical protections on video games to investigate or correct security flaws.

-  allow college professors, film students, documentary filmmakers and  producers of noncommercial videos to break copy-protection measures on  DVDs so they can embed clips for educational purposes, criticism or  commentary.

- allow computer owners to bypass  the need for external security devices called dongles if the dongle no  longer works and cannot be replaced.

- allow blind people to break locks on electronic books so that they can use them with read-aloud software and similar aides.

Although  the jailbreaking exemption is new, all the others are similar to the  last set of exemptions, which were announced in November 2006. The new  rules take effect Tuesday and are expected to last a few years.

The  exceptions are a big victory for the Electronic Frontier Foundation,  which had urged the Library of Congress to legalize several of them,  including the two regarding cell phones.

Jennifer  Stisa Granick, EFF's civil liberties director, said the  rules are  based on an important principle: Consumers should be allowed to use and  modify the devices that they purchase the way they want. "If you bought  it, you own it," she said.





wildweaselmi
Jul 28 2010 08:48 AM
I am on the fence on this...   I agree that Apple shouldn't be the only one's creating applications for their phone but then again its their phone.  As soon as you allow other applications to be installed on the iPhone without following the Apple practices and rules, then you begin to have a unstable device.

Apple has these rules and standards for a reason and I believe the reason is for uniformity, ensure reliability.  They want to keep that going and by jailbreaking the iPhone, these quality features go out the window and now Apple can't ensure the iPhone software will remain stable.  I believe they could put something in the contract when purchasing an iPhone that states the warranty limitations if the iPhone has been jailbreaked.  They should not be held accountable for the crappy software the consumer installs on a jailbreaked iPhone.