newsbot
30-08-2010, 09:50 AM
The Register reported last week that Apple is looking to fire back at iPhone jailbreakers with an application to patent a system designed to identify the âhacking, jailbreaking, unlocking or removal of a SIM cardâ from a phone so the device can be located and its data erased. The company has released a new firmware update for the sole purpose of patching a hole that was being used to jailbreak handsets running iOS 4 as well, according to the group of developers that created the first iPhone 4 jailbreak.As I write in my weekly column over at GigaOM Pro, it makes no sense for Apple to pour efforts to these kinds of things; allowing jailbreaking â even implicitly â could actually help move iPhones off the shelves.Sure, jailbreaking gives iPhone users access to a growing number of apps not supported by the App Store (tethering apps and porn among them), but even then, thereâs no downside for Apple. Any tethering usage would be mitigated by AT&Tâs metered data plans, so itâs not like users could truly abuse them. Also, when it comes to porn and anything else users could access, Apple can simply say, âWe donât support that garbage,â maintain its policy that jailbreaking automatically voids warranties and remain unsoiled in the public eye.
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