Jay Freeman, the developer behind the  Cydia app that allows software not approved by Apple to be installed on the  iPhone, has launched the Cydia Store, an unauthorized alternative online market  for iPhone applications. According to Freeman's Twitter feed, a new Cydia release was to be posted  Friday night with one app for sale and more coming next week. He said further  details will be included in the Cydia download. The Wall Street Journal reports that  two other developers are also planning online stores to sell iPhone applications  that haven't been approved by Apple. One plans a store called Rock Your Phone  for iPhone to help make jailbreaking -- the process of installing code that  undoes Apple's software lock on the iPhone -- and installing apps not approved  by Apple easier. The other plans an online store specializing in adult  applications. Apple maintains tight control over the applications that are available  through the iTunes Store for the iPhone. And while many developers accept  Apple's oversight and the market has validated it, some chafe at the company's  restrictions.   Until a few months ago, iPhone developers couldn't even discuss iPhone coding  publicly due to the restrictive non-disclosure agreement they had to accept to  use the iPhone Software Development Kit. And developers continue to have  applications rejected for things like ridiculing public figures, censorship that  wouldn't be tolerated in print or other traditional media.   Freeman insists Cydia is not about pirating applications. He says it's for  applications that Apple would never approve. "The Cydia Store is about providing  a simpler billing channel to buy the already commercial applications in Cydia,  like Snapture," said Freeman via Twitter.   The kinds of applications Apple is willing to approve for sale in its iTunes  Store have been changing, perhaps due to pressure from dissident developers like  Freeman. In December, Apple started allowing novelty applications, such as the  Pull My Finger flatulence simulator, to be sold. It had previously rejected such  apps citing their lack of utility.   Apple hasn't yet responded legally to stop Freeman and the Cydia Store, but  in comments filed last year with the U.S. Copyright Office, the company asked  the government agency not to grant a copyright law exemption so iPhones can be  legally jailbroken. Such an exemption, Apple argues, represents "an attack on  Apple's particular business choices with respect to the design of the iPhone mobile  computing platform  and the strategy for delivering applications software for the iPhone through the  iPhone App Store."   As long as there's money to be made in iPhone apps, Apple can expect that  attack to continue.  via informationweek
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1 comment:
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