iPad Jailbreaking Legalized
Earlier today, the Associated Press reported that the U.S. government announced new rules that legalize the act of jailbreaking a device to run an app that has been made incompatible by the manufacturer. In other words, it is up to the device owner to decide whether he/she wants to run third-party applications on the device or not – and that includes the iPad.
Apple – as well as many other device manufacturers – has never been fond of hackers trying to jailbreak iPhones, iPods and iPads, and thus far claimed that federal laws actually made jailbreaks illegal (Digital Millennium Copyright Act). However, the updated law includes a couple exemptions that make the act of jailbreaking devices legal – something that fell into a “gray area” until today.
Despite this ruling, jailbreaking your iPad is still considered a warranty-voiding act, and Apple has no plans to help users install third-party applications downloaded from outside its App Store. However, Apple will not be allowed to launch legal actions against hackers working on jailbreaks, or users who decide to download applications from third party stores such as Cydia.
Note that the new exemptions do not mean it is ok to download copyrighted material without paying for it.




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