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Apple makes EFF's Holiday Wish List

The Electronic Frontier Foundation has released its annual "wish list" for various tech companies and its wishes for their openness, and Apple was only mentioned in one item. The EFF wishes Apple would easily and officially provide a way for users to "get root access" on every Apple device they buy. Of course, there are still ways to get that root access and install any software you want on your Apple device. But it involves jailbreaking, a process that's relatively easy but not at all officially supported. Apple has instead provided a closed-off ecosystem of validated apps, and while that's good for things like security and stability, it's not so great for functionality outside of the officially-provided software.

David Morganstern of The Apple Core points out that Apple got off easy in the EFF's wishlist. The EFF's request for easy root access was Cupertino's only mention, and Apple wasn't mentioned specifically in the EFF's request about browser security, which Safari has been kind of struggling with lately. The wish list also mentions cloud backup services (iCloud is one example), but most of the concerns there are about encrypted data and security, which MobileMe and iCloud have been pretty good with so far.

Obviously Apple hasn't cared much about providing an official way to install your own software on iOS devices, yet sales continue to hit record levels, so there's not a lot of drive to change that position. Meanwhile, jailbreak solutions are easy enough; even without Apple's approval, there are plenty of ways to make your iOS device do what you want it to.



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The Electronic Frontier Foundation has released its annual "wish list" for various tech companies and its wishes for their openness,...
 

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Eideard

Another ideological mutation away from EFF's charter. Commiting to a specific tech construct is irrelevant to "freedom".

December 29 2011 at 7:32 AM Report abuse rate up rate down Reply
1 reply to Eideard's comment
steve

Not clear that I care that much about this issue, but accusing the EFF of going away from their charter over it seems a bit much. As far as I know, the EFF has never had a specific "charter" - they have always supported individual rights over a wide range of concerns, and they have in particular been supporters of freedom (in a FSF sense) for consumers related to technology they own. They have frequently cooperated with the FSF on issues, and the closed iOS environment has been raised by both repeatedly over a number of years.

December 29 2011 at 10:40 AM Report abuse rate up rate down Reply
Erich Heintz

I'm all for security, but as example of "struggling with lately" you cite one article from 9 months ago?

December 29 2011 at 7:28 AM Report abuse +1 rate up rate down Reply
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