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Apple Cease-And-Desists Stupidity Leak

Remember Apple's "free, plus $19.95 shipping" updater CD for Mac OS X 10.1? Turns out it's actually a full version of the operating system (which helps explain why it's so large) but it adds an extra little package called "CheckForOSX." Remove that and you can install 10.1 on any disk -- or at least, that's the secondhand version I got of what used to be at MacFixIt's Nov. 20 report, which yesterday was taken down after a note from Apple's lawyers. Here's the cease-and-desist story. We've included Apple's letter, below.

Apple cites the Lanham Act (see below) and I have no idea what that covers. But Bill Innanen pointed out on a mailing list that the operating system might be said to violate its own access control rights under the DMCA:

...since the possession of the tools to violate a copyright has been criminalized, we have yet another case of circular legal "logic." The only tool necessary to violate this particular copyright is the very operating system that the copyrighted software (the updater/full-installer) installs (or an earlier version of same).

(Just pop open the installer package with the built-in "context sensitive menu" module, find the CheckForOSX module and drag it to the trash can. Voila!)

Is the possession of MacOS X v10.1 or its installer illegal because it can be used to violate its own copyright?

(Well, actually by the letter of the law in 1201(2) I think you'd have to argue that Mac OS X 10.0 was "primarily" designed to circumvent the access controls in the 10.1 update... but it's still pretty funny.)

Bill goes on to point out: "The problem that this converted updater fixed is that there are reported problems with 10.1.1, and with a 10.0.x and the updater you can't backtrack. With the 10.1 full installer you can."

Apple's lawyers write:

We represent Apple Computer, Inc. ("Apple") with respect to its intellectual property matters. Recently, it has come to our attention that you are providing unauthorized instructions concerning the modification of the Mac OS X 10.1 update software (the "Software") on your website. Specifically, it appears that you are providing instructions for converting Mac OS X 10.1 update Software to a full install version of Mac OS X from your web site in violation of the Copyright Act and in violation of your software license agreement with Apple.

You should be aware that Apple has never authorized you modify the Software. Moreover, by providing instructions on how to modify and circumvent restrictions within the Software, you are infringing Apple's copyrights in violation of the Copyright Act and engaging in acts of unfair competition in violation of the Lanham Act. Additionally, Apple's license agreement, which you accepted upon purchasing a copy of the Software, specifically prohibits you from copying, decompiling, reverse engineering, disassembling, modifying or creating derivative works of the Software.

Consequently, on behalf of our client, we demand that you cease and desist from publishing or distributing the above-referenced materials. We believe that this is a very serious matter, thus we ask that we receive confirmation in writing from you that you have removed the infringing material from your web site.

Thank you for your prompt cooperation on this matter.

29 of 800 comments (clear)

  1. Clearly free speach must prevail by a1englishman · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I guess it doesn't matter to the lawyers, or even Congress that the instructions are protected by the First Amendment to the Constitution. It should be legal to posess and disseminate said directions, but illegal to use them. The same as plans for making a pipe bomb, or owning a Britainy Spears album.

  2. The Lanham Act by aidoneus · · Score: 5, Interesting

    The Lanham Act is actually a trademark / service mark protection law, not really a copyright law. To see Apple's lawyers use it in this context seems a bit out of the ordinary, although Apple is notorious for vigorously defending their trademark and look-and-feel related concepts (remember the OS X themes debate a few months back?). Still, if they're relying on the Lanham Act to do their bullying, they might be on shakey footing. Stick to the (deservedly despised) DMCA for things like that.

    1. Re:The Lanham Act by czardonic · · Score: 1, Interesting

      It was probably a form threatening-letter. They just haven't updated it since the DMCA was passed.

      --
      Takahashi Rumiko made beats! DON, taku, DON, taku. . .
    2. Re:The Lanham Act by Shabazz · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Clearly not a lawyer. Most tech guys have a pretty weak understanding of what lawyers do.

      Believe it or not Lawyers don't just blindly copy things from one place to another. As a lawyer and a programmer, I can value the efficiency in object oriented programming because it saves you from having to do the same thing over and over again. Legal work is very similar. Often times you can use things you've already done instead of starting from scratch.

      At the same time, this does not mean that some first year at Apple's law firm is some Lionel Hutz throwing in language that sounds good.

      Maybe you should hold back on imputing things to people you've never met. Or maybe you would just like to capitalize on anti lawyer sentiment. Either way, it's a pretty weak basis for an opinion.

  3. I'd like to thank apple... by GreenKiwi · · Score: 2, Interesting

    ... for providing a full installer, so that I can do a full clean install of the software. Updaters often leave residue from previous versions of the software.

    I just wish people wouldn't take advantage of it.

  4. Will Slashdot get a letter as well? by snoozerdss · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Since slashdot posted this story does that mean that they too will receive a letter from apple?

    --
    Snoozer.
  5. Apple isn't in the wrong here... by eXtro · · Score: 5, Interesting
    though I don't think that maxfixit.com is in the wrong either. Providing instructions on how to turn the MacOS 10.1 upgrade into a full installer is no different than providing instructions in how to convert the Macromedia Flash demo into a full working version, or providing a CD crack for Quake. All of the examples exist. You can download the Flash demo and make it a fully functioning copy. You can download a file that disables copy protection.


    Depending on how you use any of these instructions and/or pieces of software it may be illegal. It also might be legal, or at least grey. Suppose I've got a legitimate copy of MacOS 10. I've also legitimately purchased the 10.1 installer. My hard drive fails and I want to run 10.1 again. I can install MacOS 10, then install MacOS 10.1 - or - I can defeat the protection on MacOS 10.1 and install it in a single step. In this case the end result is the same, I've legally installed a copy of MacOS 10.1.


    If I don't legally have MacOS X and use this trick to get a copy of MacOS 10.1 for 20 bucks then I'm at least doing something immoral, and possibly illegal. Apple has the right to try to prevent this (beyond that, they've got an obligation to as well, an obligation to their stock holders).


    That said, it will also be ineffective. The crack will appear on some dyndns.org warez site and on gnutella etc. I had suspected that upgrade CD was a full install but didn't have a chance to verify it. I upgraded my sisters G4 over thanksgiving weekend. The CD seemed pretty full for an upgrade, and you could actually boot from it.

    1. Re:Apple isn't in the wrong here... by VRisaMetaphor · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I, for one, am glad for this "crack." I paid my $20 to get my update CD. For some reason, I assumed the CD contained a full install of X 10.1 (probably because it was so big), so after installing I tossed my original X 10.0 CDs. If I ever need to reformat my hard drive, I'm dead in the water without this little piece of useful information. All I can say is, "Thank you MacFixIt!"

  6. Am I violating the DMCA? by Wakko+Warner · · Score: 3, Interesting
    --
    "Remember when the U.S. had a drug problem, and then we declared a War On Drugs, and now you can't buy drugs anymore?"
  7. all bark, but it still bites by frankie · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Remember that anyone can write a Cease and Desist letter. Remember that lawyers are not required to be honest in such letters.

    Their job is to convince the "offending" person that it would be a bad idea to piss off their employer. The C&D is basically a more business-like version of sending a 200 pound hired goon to your door.

  8. Nothing New "Magic" by Irvu · · Score: 2, Interesting

    This isn't the first time that Apple did this. Back in the early days of Hypercard they shipped a "demo" version on all new macs. You could play stacks but not create them. That is, unless you were capable of typing the word "magic" at which point the demo would "magically" transform itself into the full thing.

    Apple never took any legal action to my knowledge. This was well before the "look and feel" days so they were still innocent, sweet and too wealthy to care.

  9. Re:Apple is still a company by edremy · · Score: 4, Interesting

    The Mac OS 10.1 update is given away for free. You walk into any Mac-carrying retail outlet and they will hand you this nicely-packaged CD with instructions and send you on your way.

    Actually, they won't. They will look at you with a confused expression and go "I don't think we have that", or perhaps a "Sorry, Apple didn't send us any- all we have is the full version."

    At least, that was my experience when I went to upgrade 10.0. The former was 2 separate Circuit City's, the latter a Mac store (Not one of Apple's). I finally asked a guy I knew online to make me an (illegal) copy.

    Apple screwed the pooch bigtime on this upgrade. I'm one of the few folks here who will speak of Macs without spitting and they made it close to impossible for a loyal user to upgrade from a slow, buggy, feature incomplete beta version of the OS.

    Eric

    --
    "Seven Deadly Sins? I thought it was a to-do list!"
  10. Fat binary - ppc and i386 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

    It's interesting to note that if you run the unix file command on the CheckFor OSX binary you get:

    CheckForOSX: Mach-O fat file with 2 architectures
    CheckForOSX (for architecture ppc): Mach-O executable ppc
    CheckForOSX (for architecture i386): Mach-O executable i386

  11. OS/2 was the first by nusuth · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Warp's free trial versions had a time limited kernel related file (I don't remember what it was), which had a non-time limited version in the bootable install medium (floppies or the bootable cd.) You just had to copy it on top of installed one and that could be done a single drag of mouse too.

    --

    Gentlemen, you can't fight in here, this is the War Room!

  12. Re:Apple isn't used to UNIX hacking culture yet by BlowChunx · · Score: 2, Interesting

    They may not be used to hacking from UNIX dweebs, but they are by no means unaccustomed to it...ever heard of the annual Mac Hack conference?

  13. Re:Am I violating the DMCA even more? by Fnkmaster · · Score: 3, Interesting
    LOL. This is just too funny. Apple thinks that it is illegal to TELL people to violate their EULAs. What is this, contributory EULA infringement? I don't think it exists. I don't see how telling people that deleting a file from their install CDs will let them use the CDs elsewhere could be illegal under any law, except possible the worst law ever written, the DMCA.


    Infringing sentence: Make a copy of the CD without the line "CheckforOSX" in the System/Installation/Packages/Essentials.pkg file". Ooops, I've broken the law. Heh. This is even worse than the 3 line RSA being illegal - this isn't even an algorithm but a tiny fragment of english text.

  14. Re:EULA? by imadork · · Score: 4, Interesting
    Does Apple really make you agree to the EULA at PURCHASE TIME?

    So that's why when I got my "free" upgrade at CompUSA, they went through great pains to charge me exactly $.01 for it! (They said I didn't have to give them the penny, but I did anyway).

    Apple usually includes a boilerplate license on a sheet of paper (in several languages) in the box with all their software, and a big red dot on the CD pouch that says "By opening this, you agree to the license". I would imagine that's the earliest point at which you agree.

    And the license they included really was a boilerplate, including the part where you can only install it on one computer!?!?!! What did they want me to do, get two "free" copies from CompUSA so I could upgrade my "Smurfy" B&W G3 as well as my iBook? If I installed it on more than one computer, am I liable for triple damages?

  15. It's a legal trick by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    I doubt that the lawyers are confused at all. Lawyers routinely cite irrelevant legislation in these cease-and-desist letters in the hopes that it will scare the supposed offender into complying with their requests.

    It's a legal trick. Usually if they use one of these tricks, it means that they really don't have any solid legal ground to stand on.

    This has personally happened to me regarding an open source project I started. My lawyer advised me that, although their claims had no legal merit, it would cost me plenty of money just to defend myself from the unwarranted infringement claims.

    Knowledge should not be illegal.

    Everyday TV programs show me a various ways to kill a person, but that doesn't make the TV networks accessories to murder if a similar crime is commited. It is still up to the individual to commit the crime, be it murder or copyright infringement.

  16. Re:Well.. by quinto2000 · · Score: 2, Interesting
    This is actually a key point: the cease and desist letter points to contract law. IP rights, in and of themselves, are not what brings this about. It's the ability to make ancillary agreements. In this case, Mac Fix-it clearly broke the EULA. They don't have a leg to stand on as long as the EULA is contractually valid, which it shouldn't be, but is.

    Actually, I don't see why an individual should be stopped from doing this on their own, but publishing the details is another matter altogether. It amounts to theft.

    --
    Ceci n'est pas un post
  17. Free Speech... by greygent · · Score: 2, Interesting

    > Are they trashing freedom-of-speech?

    Actually they are... do you think the EFF and various other folks actually give that much of a fuck about pirating DVD's? No, they're concerned about politicians being successfully lobbied to rob us of our constitutional rights.

    Hell, I wore my DeCSS shirts long before I ever owned a DVD or a DVD player, for that matter. It's not about DVD's specifically, it's about our rights being eroded a small chunk at a time. "They came for the jews, and I did nothing, They can for the blacks and I did nothing, They came for me, and no one was left to help me" sort of thing. I think Jesse Helms of all people, said it best when asked why he was such a nazi bastard: (paraphrased) "If we bow down even a little now, they'll take more, later".

    I don't particularly see why someone would waste so much time copying a DVD, when they could just buy it for $25. Hell, you can even rent it at Blockbuster before you buy it, to make sure you want to make the $25 investment into it. Try doing that with Windows XP legally.

    Besides, do you think the average Mac user has the scruples to do ANYTHING beyond find and click the Install icon? No, they don't, and even if they did, they're Mac owners who invested a significant amount of their hard-earned cash into Apple, hoping at some point they'd finish Taligent, err I mean Copland, err I mean Rhapsody, err I mean OS X. It's not like they aren't Apple customers. It's not like some guy at home building a PC and pirating a copy of XP to run on it. These people gamble on Apple.

    I personally purchased my Mac with great reservations about Apple's direction. I don't want to have my nice new G4/867 obsoleted in 6 months when OS X 10.5 with Aqua++ comes out. Even G3 users are fucked. OS X 10.1 on an iMac is painfully slow. Rhapsody was speedy.

  18. Remeber you don't own software. by UnifiedTechs · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I am surprised this fact has not been pointed out. Remeber software is licensed not bought. For all it matters apple didn't even need to install a checker at all.

    The license states you need to own a copy of OS 10.0 to use the CD, that is the illegal part. For all it matters what the CD contains they could make one CD that has 9, 10.0, and 10.1 on one disk, if you only paid for the use of 9 then that is all you can legally install.

    I can legally buy a gun, I can legally walk in a store, but if I use that gun to rob that store it is illegal, the tool dosen't matter, that you use it for the legal/approved outcome does.

  19. Re:No, they're not by imadork · · Score: 3, Interesting
    The correct analogy is if the cashier at a store gives you a $20 instead of the single that you were supposed to get in your change. Or buying a car from someone and finding an expensive watch between the seats.
    You inadvertently receive something you didn't pay for. Keeping it (or similarly, installing it without paying for a copy) is stealing.

    Yeah, but if I find that watch in the seat and give it back, do I have to "give back" the identical watch I already own as well?

    I already own two copies of 10.0 (one bought retail and one that came with my iBook), as well as two copies of the 10.1 upgrade, (one bought from the Apple Store and one obtained for $.01 from CompUSA). I possess every license I need to run Mac OS 10.1 on BOTH of the Macs in my house. Why am I "stealing" if I use this method to save a step in the installation process if I ever have to reinstall? And why does Apple (and all other Software vendors) automatically assume I'm a thieving, commie Pirate if all I want to do is make a copy to make life easier for myself? Doesn't intent mean anything anymore, or should we outlaw all means to copy anything?

  20. Re:No, they're not by DunbarTheInept · · Score: 5, Interesting
    It is morally wrong to keep it. It is stealing, no matter how clever your arguments are to the contrary.
    Whether it is wrong to steal is is irrelevant since that's not what the complaint is about. Apple isn't going after people doing the stealing. They're going after the people *publicizing* how easy it is to steal it. It's like pointing out that someone left their front door unlocked, and getting sued for pointing it out when someone ELSE uses that information to burgle the house.

    It is a disturbing trend that businesses are more concerned with the act of POINTING OUT how crappy their security is than they are with the actual act of exploiting that bad security. They don't give a damn about the theft - they just don't like the bad press, and will gag you for trying to point out a truth about them that they find embarassing.

    The DMCA - the law that makes it illegal to tell the truth.

    --

    Don't label something "offtopic" unless you know the topic well enough to tell what's on topic.

  21. Re:No, they're not by 3am · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Come on!

    What do we hate here? Current enforcement of copyright law. Why do we hate it? Because it takes laws that exist for good reason (protecting inventors from others immediately stealing their work and profiting from it) and twists their meaning to protect bad behavior (not letting me keep a backup of an ebook, if i stopped my personal boycott of the product). IE, it make morally shaky actions legal.

    I won't condescend to you and make the obvious comparison here...

    --

    A: None. The Universe spins the bulb, and the Zen master merely stays out of the way.
  22. Re:how many lawyers does it take... by killmenow · · Score: 4, Interesting

    ...Apple's license agreement, which you accepted upon purchasing a copy of the Software, specifically prohibits you from copying,
    There may be an argument that they copied the CD, but posting instructions is not copying and so is not a violation of this part of the license
    decompiling,
    Nope...no decompiling going on here
    reverse engineering,
    This is not reverse engineering. In order to figure out how to do this, it seems all you have to do is poke around a bit. And Apple gives you the tools directly to do it. It's not like you have to have SoftICE or some-such to step through the thing to figure this out. This is simply using a feature of the software itself.
    disassembling,
    No disassembly going on here...move along.
    modifying
    Okay...now they've got 'em. Doing this may very well be legally considered modifying the software. Of course, I still want to know what constitutes modifying. If I simply turn [off|on] a feature using the menuing system or some other built-in facility of the OS, is that modifying? I think an argument may be made that if modifying the OS is illegal, then changing your desktop wallpaper as well as a number of other configuration tasks are rendered illegal as well. Hell, setting your TIME ZONE could be illegal!
    or creating derivative works of the Software.
    Well, burning it onto a CD after deleting that file may very well be creating a derivative work...but the whole point of this is: describing the actions on a website is not anything the license says you can't do. Putting up these instructions on the web may be a violation of the DMCA, but it is most definitely not a violation of the EULA.

    Actually following the instructions probably is.
  23. Re:how many lawyers does it take... by quinto2000 · · Score: 2, Interesting
    Hear hear! I believe in free market economics, with a healthy dose of regulation. What has happened is that corporations have become enthroned, and given far more power than they have had in the past. Still in this century, the corporate charter was not a right -- it was earned. They had been revoked when the corporation was no longer fulfilling the charter's terms, or was actively harmful to society. A quote by Abraham Lincoln sums it up well:

    "I see in the near future a crisis approaching that unnerves me and causes me to tremble for the safety of my country. ... corporations have been enthroned and an era of corruption in high places will follow, and the money power of the country will endeavor to prolong its reign by working upon the prejudices of the people until all wealth is aggregated in a few hands and the Republic is destroyed." -Abraham Lincoln, Nov. 21, 1864
    Corporations are not free market.
    --
    Ceci n'est pas un post
  24. Re:how many lawyers does it take... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    Gun manufacturers are, however, enablers. For them to reject all responsibility makes no sense.

    Using this logic, one could argue that Bic enables arson, the auto industry enables drunk driving, and Boeing enabled the 9/11 terrorists. Despite the gun industry lawsuits sponsored by the Clinton administration, the courts have consistently held that the manufacturer of a legal product is not liable for the criminal misuse of that product.

    The thing I want for Christmas is a country in which reasonable consideration of the facts is the rule, rather than something to be discarded when not convenient to one's personal beliefs.

  25. Re:Enforceable? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    Was agree even clicked here? Their letter says "EULA that you agreed to by purchasing". Was the EULA available/presented/visible before the purchase? Is that enough to make it legal? Is it actually enforceable in court? Is buying software/opening a package/clicking a link enough to be taken as 'consent'? Does it require a signature and date and preferably witnesses to make it a contract? Can you agree to it after you've crossed out the bits you don't like, and assume their agreement to your own proposed terms? (maybe you should add a clause at the end -"by not contacting me you agree to these adjusted terms..."

    I've started to wonder recently how close EULAs legally are to "By reading this sentence you've agreed to pay me $20." Or perhaps "You consent to paying me $20 by continuing to read this post."

    Which I'm not going to enforce, of course.

  26. you are missing the point by valmont · · Score: 2, Interesting
    it is still very simple. their software license agreement, tho u may never read it, but explicetely forbids you from reverse-engineering or altering their code. Trashing CheckForOSX is doing just that. That hole was never documented for anyone to exploit it.

    Apple clearly did not want you to use it, the fact that you "found it" is far from being relevant to the situation. Exploiting the hole clearly involves somehow altering their software. It is hence against the agreement u *contractually* accept by installing the software. You are contractually bound. The fact that you didn't read the contract doesn't render you immune to prosecution.