Linked by Amjith Ramanujam on Sun 3rd Aug 2008 15:56 UTC, submitted by netpython
Apple "Apple Inc. has pulled its security engineering team out of a planned public discussion on the company's security practices, which had been set for next week's Black Hat security conference in Las Vegas."
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lurch_mojoff
Member since:
2007-05-12

Apple even uses a form of DRM to try to keep you from running OS X on non Apple hardware.


Care to elaborate on that? Because in my experience, aside from the copies of the OS that come with computers (laptops actually, I haven't tried with the desktop installation disks, but I assume the case is the same) for which there is a check for the "model string" in the firmware, Apple doesn't even ask you for a license key upon installing OS X, let alone checking whether you're installing and/or running the OS on "genuine" hardware, let alone implementing DRM.

As for the rest of the DRM, Apple are implementing as much as it is necessary. To my knowledge, the DRM stops at the Quicktime importers level, and there most certainly is no DRM module in the kernel of the OS (unlike an operating system, you seem to be so fond of).

Oh, and before you dismiss me as being a zealot (which I probably am), I'll just say that there is plenty to bitch about Apple, like the lack of transparency in their security policies and procedures - you know, the stuff the article is talking about. You don't have to make up shit to diss Apple.

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