Linked by Thom Holwerda on Mon 26th Jul 2010 17:48 UTC
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I agree that although this is big news, cause for celebration, and a blow to Apple's hegemony, it's not going to have much real-world impact, because the geniuses who are out these figuring out the jailbreaks would do it whether it was illegal in the US or not.
I don't disagree, but one point to consider is that with the DMCA exemption, it opens the door for mainstream media sites to publish info regarding the jailbreaking process (ie. step-by-step guides), which could help "legitimize" jailbreaking for the general public and encourage more users to try it. Even CNN was discussing it today, for instance.
DMCA would otherwise prevent them from providing or even linking to the information (US-based at least).




Member since:
1997-10-01
I agree that although this is big news, cause for celebration, and a blow to Apple's hegemony, it's not going to have much real-world impact, because the geniuses who are out these figuring out the jailbreaks would do it whether it was illegal in the US or not. This doesn't compel Apple to make jaibreaking easy, nor does it particularly clarify the awkward instance where you take your jailbroken and broken iPhone into the Apple store to be fixed under warranty.
Really the main thing that this does is give people in the US with jailbroken iPhones a little more moral high ground because they're not actually taking part in a semi-legal activity anymore.