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iPhone Apps And The Hacking Issue

March 8th, 2010

There’s an ongoing showdown that will soon come to a head, and it all has to do with iPhone apps. The iPhone is Apple’s smart phone that has countless capabilities, allowing people to write little applications that others can download to enable them to do, well, almost anything. Programmers submit these applications to Apple, and once the company approves them, they go into the App Store. These apps usually cost a dollar or two, though some very detailed ones can be more expensive. But there are also many free apps, so there’s something for everyone.

All is not roses with the iPhone apps, however. Many people have objected to the way Apple exerts such rigid control over what they are allowed to download. They frequently liken it to a company producing a computer but dictating which programs they are and aren’t allowed to use on it, which you just don’t see happening. Because of this, perhaps ten percent of iPhone users have performed iPhone hacks, devising workarounds against the guards that prevent them from downloading applications Apple hasn’t authorized.

Not surprisingly, Apple decided not to take this tampering with iPhone apps lying down. The company insists that it’s not going to authorize this hacking, or as it is also known, “jailbreaking,” while the Electronic Frontier Foundation among others have asked the nation’s Copyright Office to allow hacking in certain instances. Apple claims that opening up the iPhone this way would cost money, deter its own development efforts, and open it to a vast number of service calls from customers who become angry when iPhone downloads from unauthorized sources interfere with their phone’s performance.

An official request for exemptions from copyright restrictions on iPhone downloads, from sources other than Apple, appear to be made for very important reasons. Many involve disallowing Apple’s monopolistic ability to restrict access to legitimate sites or programs. And some iPhone apps have “shuttered” or shut down sections, which can affect people adversely, such as a downloaded ebook whose read-aloud function is blocked and can’t be used by blind people. The Copyright Office, whose ruling is expected sometime in 2010, will need to consider all sides of the question in order to make a decision that’s fair to the public, as well as to Apple.

Kenny Leichester is a foremost expert in the interior design industry specializing in the outdoor or patio settings using outdoor heaters, patio umbrellas, outdoor cushions, patio lighting and so on to create exquisitely beautiful layout. His work on patio umbrellas are widely distributed and is a regular contributor to PatioShoppers.com.

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