Linked by Thom Holwerda on Mon 26th Jul 2010 17:48 UTC
Thread beginning with comment 434520
To view parent comment, click here.
To read all comments associated with this story, please click here.
To view parent comment, click here.
To read all comments associated with this story, please click here.
RE[2]: Hardly a blow at all
by Almafeta on Tue 27th Jul 2010 03:35
in reply to "RE: Hardly a blow at all"
I'm sure Apple won't stop, but they'll have to change their song from 'jailbreaking is illegal'
I'm pretty sure that they've got an argument to make. The Library of Congress ruled that it's not a crime to steal code for the purposes of modifying a device - as long as the usage is "de minimis". If Apple can successfully argue that no matter the size of the code, regardless of if it's one byte or one gigabyte, that the impact of its use is more than de minimis, then we're back to square one.




Member since:
2005-08-28
Well, it prevents them from going after people simply for jailbreaking, which is what they can currently threaten.
I'm sure Apple won't stop, but they'll have to change their song from 'jailbreaking is illegal' to 'these people are obviously downloading illegal content/hacking wireless base towers/the mafia'. And probably continue to throw up as many hurdles as they can to make jailbreaking unpalatable.
I suspect this only puts jailbreaking in the same category as bittorrent. The concept itself is not illegal, but what people do with it, might be. Think of the children!