Apple’s iPhone developer agreement published (updated)
March 10, 2010 · Print This Article
The EFF has posted one of Apple’s most secret and most confidential documents – its developer agreement that all devs must sign in order to access the company’s iPhone SDK.
The EFF found a creative way to legally get and publish the document. Noticing that NASA had an app, the EFF used the Freedom of info Act (FOIA) to ask NASA for a copy, “so that the general public could see what rules controlled the technology they could use with their phones.”
Originally NASA responded with a March 2009 version of the agreement but the story has been updated with a January 2010 version. Here’s a direct link to the 33 page 299kb PDF document. Great bedtime ing.
The contents of the agreement are hardly surprising, the EFF’s Fred von Lohmann summed up the highlights:
- A ban on public statements, forbidding developers to speak about the agreement.
- Apps made with the iPhone software development kit can only be distributed through the App Store, meaning rejected apps can’t be served through the underground app store Cydia, for instance.
- Apple indemnifies itself against developer liability surpassing $50, meaning whether developers get sued, Apple will be liable for no more than $50 in damages.
- No reverse engineering, or enabling others to reverse-engineer, the iPhone SDK.
- No messing with Apple products. That means no apps that enable modifying or hacking Apple products are allowed.
- Apple can “revoke digital certification of any of Your Applications at any duration.” No surprise there: Your app can be pulled even whether it’s aly been approved, which we’ve aly seen happen a number of times.
Tip: EFF
[Source] Jason D. O’Grady
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