Totally awesome software for iPhone and OS X

Wednesday, January 21, 2009

This keeps coming up.

Petition to stop software patents in Europe.

I don't think it'll ever go away actually, introduction of patents would probably make a few people and corporations happy and a lot of lawyers very rich.

Worth reading the studies that point to the conclusion that this is a pretty bad idea before signing :)

Monday, January 19, 2009

I wish I had a screencap of this...

I've got Bloomberg buzzing away in the corner for a bit of company (freelancing can be lonley) and they just flashed this across the screen.

Bloomberg INSIGHT : Global trade slowdown bad for growth.


Is that really so very insightful? Do traders still pay a few thousand a month for terminals to recieve helpful updates like that? Perhaps I should ditch this coding lark and consider a career in financial journalism.

Tuesday, January 6, 2009

Watch out where the huskies go...

This is interesting.

The iPhone Dev Team are largely responsible for the genius software that jailbreaks and unlocks iPhones. I use it because I live in a fairly remote region of France with intermittent mobile coverage and had a UK iPhone. So, rather than paying international mobile rates or waste time and money signing up for an Orange (France Telecom) deal it was just easier and cheaper to get a pay as you go sim and run pwnagetool (the software that removes the carrier restriction on the phone).

Works perfectly.

Anyway, a few people have taken the freely available work of the Team and packaged it up as an 'unlocking solution' and are selling it. Selling it for £50 no less! This, despite the iPhone Dev Team not accepting donations and having a license clearly stating that the code is freely available but should NOT be used for commercial purposes.

It's an interesting case because I presume the offender (I won't give them the google karma of linking to their site) is assuming that as it's a legally grey area they won't have any recourse. However, I'd argue that the Dev Team have a pretty good case and here's a couple of reasons why - I'm not a lawyer though, just an interested geek...

1. As far as I know unlocking phones is not illegal. As long as you fulfil your contract with the carrier, the phone is not stolen and you legally connect to a new network I don't think there's a problem. Unlocking phones for profit may be an issue, but that's not the fault of the software and is more likely to count against the person selling the software, not those giving it away.

2. The Dev Team can prove that they wrote the software and released it under a non-commercial license and they can also prove that the people that stole it have hardly made any attempt to obfuscate the fact. So, they can't say, for example, that they looked at the source and wrote their own version and even if they could they'd still be on dodgy ground. In fact, all they seem to have done is hacked a few properties strings around and changed the odd copyright message.

3. If the Dev Team or users of the software have somehow violated any of Apples terms and conditions that's a separate issue and would be the case if you used the £50 (still can't get over that figure) copy of the same software anyway. So it's irrelevant to the case.

The Dev Team are looking for legal advice :

Also if there are any UK based lawyers or student lawyers that could help us with this, then please contact us at blog@iphone-dev.org of course student lawyers can’t give us specific legal advice, but even your informal opinion helps.


So if anyone who reads this can help, I'm sure you know what to do. Finally, I'd like to thank the Dev Team for spending their time and money hacking on this and I'd like to spend a little time frowning in the general direction of people who rip off their (and other open source) work for profit.

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