Tag Archive for 'legal'

Jailbreakers and rooters rejoice, DMCA exceptions added for jailbreaking and rooting

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Jailbreak your iPhone? Root your Droid? Worry about its legality? Worry no more! The Library of Congress in America has added a DMCA (Digital Millenium Copyright Act) exception that allows unapproved software on handsets: otherwise known as jailbreaking in the iPhone world, or rooting in the Android and webOS world.

Here’s the full statement by the LoC:

Computer programs that enable wireless telephone handsets to execute software applications, where circumvention is accomplished for the sole purpose of enabling interoperability of such applications, when they have been lawfully obtained, with computer programs on the telephone handset.

Although this doesn’t mean that these companies will have to jailbreak your phone for you, it means that they won’t be able to sue you or file any legal action against you. So that means that you can jailbreak and unlock your iPhone, and Apple cannot call the practice illegal. And this also allows groups like the iPhone Dev Team and ih8sn0w to continue operating legally. Everyone wins!

As for the Android scene, there isn’t too much scrutiny regarding rooting in Google’s eyes, but maybe it makes the rooted users feel a bit better.

Even better, this means that ripping a DVD is completely legal, as long as you don’t distribute it.

[via LoC]

Kazaa founders launch a new (and legal) music service

Kazaa was infamous for several reasons: not only was it filled with viruses and everything else besides what you were searching for, it was also under investigation by law enforcement, who eventually shut down the service. Now, the Kazaa founders are back with a completely new (and legal) music service: Rdio.

The web service attempts to give you “unlimited access to music from your computer and mobile phone, even when you’re offline.” Sort of a Spotify for America, huh? It also gets into a bit of social interaction. Unlike services like Pandora (which have services that automatically rank a song or album’s similarity), Rdio’s selections are favourited by other consumers.

The service will cost a fee, although we’re not sure what that fee will be. A beta version of the app is now available in the iPhone App Store for free.