Difference between revisions of "Talk:Disclaimer"

From The iPhone Wiki
Jump to: navigation, search
(New page: I have mixed feelings about the DRM thing. I believe that as long as no binary files are posted, and only methods for decrypting applications you already own should be tolerated. Reversers...)
 
Line 1: Line 1:
 
I have mixed feelings about the DRM thing. I believe that as long as no binary files are posted, and only methods for decrypting applications you already own should be tolerated. Reversers are very interested in the way that some applications work. For example, Remote, the iTunes controller application made by Apple, would be very interesting to disassemble and see how they managed to do something like that within the bounds of their own SDK.
 
I have mixed feelings about the DRM thing. I believe that as long as no binary files are posted, and only methods for decrypting applications you already own should be tolerated. Reversers are very interested in the way that some applications work. For example, Remote, the iTunes controller application made by Apple, would be very interesting to disassemble and see how they managed to do something like that within the bounds of their own SDK.
  +
  +
Feel free to reverse remote from a black box standpoint. And if you know how to get at the binary, that's fine. But thats one thing that shouldn't be posted here.
  +
  +
Look, when people download music, the RIAA loses...who cares. When people download movies the MPAA loses... again who cares. But if people pirate apps, the developers lose. And thats bad.

Revision as of 21:25, 28 July 2008

I have mixed feelings about the DRM thing. I believe that as long as no binary files are posted, and only methods for decrypting applications you already own should be tolerated. Reversers are very interested in the way that some applications work. For example, Remote, the iTunes controller application made by Apple, would be very interesting to disassemble and see how they managed to do something like that within the bounds of their own SDK.

Feel free to reverse remote from a black box standpoint. And if you know how to get at the binary, that's fine. But thats one thing that shouldn't be posted here.

Look, when people download music, the RIAA loses...who cares. When people download movies the MPAA loses... again who cares. But if people pirate apps, the developers lose. And thats bad.