- Apr 15, 2007
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(Not sure if this belongs in the Apple forums or here)
Apple will sue and have this overturned considering their is precedent for sue ToS violations (see PayStar)
When you have unelected bureaucrats making the rules up on the fly you end up with stupid decisions like this one.
Owners of the iPhone will be able to legally break electronic locks on their devices in order to download software applications that haven't been approved by Apple Inc., according to new government rules announced Monday.
The decision to allow the practice commonly known as "jailbreaking" is one of a handful of new exemptions from a 1998 federal law that prohibits people from bypassing technical measures that companies put on their products to prevent unauthorized uses. The Library of Congress, which oversees the Copyright Office, reviews and authorizes exemptions every three years to ensure that the law does not prevent certain non-infringing use of copyright-protected material.
Apple will sue and have this overturned considering their is precedent for sue ToS violations (see PayStar)
When you have unelected bureaucrats making the rules up on the fly you end up with stupid decisions like this one.
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