Seriously, are you fourteen years old? You sound like a fourteen year old arguing with your parents. You should seriously dial down the spaz factor in your posts. Or dial down the sugar in your Cheerios.
Here's Apple's official position on jailbreaking. They mention both the iPad and iPod multiple times. They mention that jailbreaking violates the EULA. Interesting that they completely omit any hint of it
violating the law. When a company is actively trying to deter a behavior, you'd think it might occur to them how useful it could be to mention that the behavior
is against the law.There are links all over the web, on mainstream U.S. hosted websites, to software that is overtly advertised as iPad/iPod jailbreaking software. How do you suppose this can be?
I'll show you the law that makes jailbreaking an iPad legal when you show me the law that makes it legal for you to drive your car with the window rolled down.
What you are saying is idiotic. You have no idea how our legal system works. Courts do not have to play make believe when they're applying laws to fact patterns. First, jailbreaking wasn't even illegal
before these new DMCA exemptions were announced. Many people just thought that they might be, but it had never been decided by the courts or legislature. The Librarian of Congress issues exemptions to the DMCA when an access control is substantially hampering people's ability to use their devices in non-copyright-infringing ways. That makes things much clearer. But a court faced with a civil action or charges for jailbreaking an iPad does not have to (and won't) just read the text and make an asinine ruling based on an asinine issue of semantics. They have access to the Library of Congress's process, hearings, advisory committee notes, briefs, etc. They are able to look at the
purpose of the law and see that the CDMA or GSM chip has
absolutely no bearing whatsoever on whether Apple's access controls are hampering people's ability to use non-Apple-approved software on their devices.
Jailbreaking an iPad is no more illegal than using an electric wheelchair in a park with posted signs that say, "No Vehicles In The Park." Which is to say that a layperson who reads the ordinance might make a big fuss about it, but a lawyer will just roll his eyes and say, "You can use your wheelchair in the park. They're talking about cars."
Apple are not laypersons. That's why they don't claim jailbreaking is illegal and why they issue no cease and desist orders and bring no civil actions against the makers of jailbreak tools. ark_arder, stop blustering for a second and just use your common sense. Apple DOES NOT want people to jailbreak. Just think about it for a few minutes. Let that plant at least a seed of doubt in your position. You may think I'm Perry Mason (who never lost a case as far as I know, but whatever), but ---fudgesicle--- . . . do you not think that Apple has an army of the highest paid, most talented lawyers that money can buy? Do you seriously think that you're smarter than they are? We've seen how aggressive Apple's legal team is. They've sued fan blogs for posting details of rumored equipment. They ---smurfing--- broke the door down of the Gizmodo editor's apartment who got a hold of an iPhone 4 that was left in a bar by a tester a couple months before release, and they confiscated all his computer equipment. They
sent a 3rd grader a cease and desist letter when she sent them a letter suggesting ways to make the iPod Nano better. They cease-and-desisted an iPhone stand maker for naming their product the
Podium iPhone Stand. Apple's legal department is notoriously aggressive. They are notorious for being bullies. ark . . . if jailbreaking the iPad was illegal, Apple would say so. And they would pursue it. Let me know when you can show me that driving with your window rolled down is legal. Make sure you include references. Or it'll just be, "All hearsay your honor!"
