Linked by Thom Holwerda on Thu 31st Jul 2008 22:03 UTC
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RE[4]: Modification Question
by alcibiades on Sat 2nd Aug 2008 10:15
in reply to "RE[3]: Modification Question"
There selling this solution to drive hardware sales of their own clone products without an OEM license from Apple to do so.... This is using tools to debug the Apple Installation process and thus write scripts to mimick the Apple certified hardware to allow it to install on their non-licensed hardware which gives them a profit.
Yes, all true. None of it is unlawful. What is unlawful at least in the EC is having contractual conditions which prevent people from doing this sort of thing. They do not need an OEM license from anyone to do it. Just buy the bits and assemble them.
They are called 'clone products'. What they actually are is identical hardware, just not bought from Apple. So what? Nothing unlawful about that either. This is what happens when all your components are sourceable on the open market by anyone who chooses to buy them in.
RE[5]: Modification Question
by tyrione on Sat 2nd Aug 2008 22:49
in reply to "RE[4]: Modification Question"
"There selling this solution to drive hardware sales of their own clone products without an OEM license from Apple to do so.... This is using tools to debug the Apple Installation process and thus write scripts to mimick the Apple certified hardware to allow it to install on their non-licensed hardware which gives them a profit.
Yes, all true. None of it is unlawful. What is unlawful at least in the EC is having contractual conditions which prevent people from doing this sort of thing. They do not need an OEM license from anyone to do it. Just buy the bits and assemble them.
They are called 'clone products'. What they actually are is identical hardware, just not bought from Apple. So what? Nothing unlawful about that either. This is what happens when all your components are sourceable on the open market by anyone who chooses to buy them in. "
When you actually stop citing the EC we might have a debate. Until then you're pissing in the wind adjacent to my wind that focuses on the US.




Member since:
2005-11-21
Probably. What is unlawful about that?
There selling this solution to drive hardware sales of their own clone products without an OEM license from Apple to do so; and if they think the responsibility of this software tool will be the responsibility of the hardware purchaser they are completely wrong.
This isn't a reverse engineering case. This is using tools to debug the Apple Installation process and thus write scripts to mimick the Apple certified hardware to allow it to install on their non-licensed hardware which gives them a profit.
This case will end quickly for Psystar.