Slashdot Mirror


Google Serves a Cease-and-Desist On Android Modder

Several readers sent in word that Google has served a Cease and Desist order to Cyanogen, one of the most prolific Android modders: his CyanogenMod is enjoyed by 30,000 users. The move is puzzling. Gizmodo wonders what Google's game is, and Lauren Weinstein calls the move "not of the high 'Googley' caliber" that one would expect of the company.

336 comments

  1. License missing by sopssa · · Score: 5, Informative

    Google Maps, Google Talk and Gmail and so on require a license to distribute them. Cyanogen doesn't have one. Google C&D's because of that. Case closed.

    1. Re:License missing by fuzzyfuzzyfungus · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Google is clearly within their rights to C&D over those applications. The curious question, though, is "why would they do so?". Cyanogen is distributed for phones that shipped with those apps anyway(so it isn't as though there is any huge pile of licensing revenue on the table here), and copyrights, unlike trademarks, don't have to be defended unless you want to.

      There must be some reason why Google would risk upsetting a group made up, more or less, of self-selected enthusiasts of Android and its continued development, in exchange for no obvious money. Is Google confident enough in the value of its apps that it sees those Google specific apps as a future distinguishing feature for Android phones, one that OEMs will pay good money for? Are potential telco partners pissed that Cyanogen is something eminently worth rooting your handset for?

      The existence of their legal right is uncontroversial; but I find their potential motives a bit baffling.

    2. Re:License missing by Elros · · Score: 1, Interesting

      In some cases, failure to sufficiently defend one's rights to some IP (intellectual property) results in the inability to defend it in the future. I.e. If Google gets in the habit of knowingly allowing re-distribution of their applications with out a license, they loose any right to enforce the copyright in the future.

    3. Re:License missing by BlueBlade · · Score: 4, Informative

      Like the parent said, that only applies to trademarks and not to copyright.

      --
      Religion is the best example of mass psychosis
    4. Re:License missing by ajs · · Score: 4, Insightful

      It's pretty clear that Google goes way out of its way to provide APIs and guidance on using its stuff as a third party, so I suspect that there's specifics in this C&D that aren't just "you used our service." Specifically, if they were re-packaging Google's logos or the like, then there's real copyright concerns there.

    5. Re:License missing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

      That's only for trademarks. Copyright and patents doesn't require defending hence why you see patent trolls wait until a product is well-entrentched before they sue them for "damages."

      I can understand Google's viewpoint on this. Assuming Cyanogen wants to continue to distribute the programs, they can always just go through the proper channels first. Then they would have a stance if Google was being slow or rejected them. It's really an issue of google protecting themselves. They probably want to avoid legal hassles that involve 3rd party distributors (where the binaries could be modified without google's knowledge or infected with a virus unintentionally or other things).

    6. Re:License missing by R2.0 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I'm guessing it's like having a pickup game of softball at your local municipal field, and you get busted. Why? You need a permit. It's free and easy to get, but you still need to get it.

      Google's saying "We ask everybody else to play by these rules, which aren't even onerous, so you need to as well."

      --
      "As God is my witness, I thought turkeys could fly." A. Carlson
    7. Re:License missing by Nethemas+the+Great · · Score: 1

      I suspect it may have to do with Google being perceived as permissive of unsanctioned modding--a thing of great concern for carriers. Up to this point Google has only had a very limited success penetrating the U.S. market with phones running Android. Google could be trying to bolster its image with carriers by stopping (limiting) rogue phones.

      --
      Two of my imaginary friends reproduced once ... with negative results.
    8. Re:License missing by Chelloveck · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Like the parent said, that only applies to trademarks and not to copyright.

      You mean trademarks like Gmail(tm) and the Google(tm) logo? Which are almost certainly being distributed as part of those apps?

      --
      Chelloveck
      I give up on debugging. From now on, SIGSEGV is a feature.
    9. Re:License missing by Overly+Critical+Guy · · Score: 1, Interesting

      It's amazing how quickly Slashdotters will rush to defend Google over anything. I notice you've made many other comments in this story defending Google. If this was Microsoft, they'd be portrayed as the greedy corporation exploiting software licenses to shut down freedom. When it's Google, we're supposed to shut our eyes and cover our ears. "Case closed."

      --
      "Sufferin' succotash."
    10. Re:License missing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It can apply to copyright if it becomes a pattern. It automatically applies to trademarks whether there's a pattern or not.

    11. Re:License missing by royler · · Score: 0, Redundant

      cant allow a precedent to be set

    12. Re:License missing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Informative

      Quit being such a fucking LOOSER (rhymes with GOOSER) and learn how to spell "lose" (rhymes with "news") correctly.

    13. Re:License missing by Threni · · Score: 1

      > Google is clearly within their rights to C&D over those applications. The curious question, though, is "why would they do so?"

      Because they don't want to lose the ability to continue to license IP required for Google maps etc from third parties.

    14. Re:License missing by Hatta · · Score: 1

      Why is this guy distributing the modded ROM and not a patch for the ROM? Surely if you're capable enough to change the ROM on your phone, you're capable of applying a patch first.

      --
      Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
    15. Re:License missing by jeffasselin · · Score: 1

      Laches might still apply.

      --
      If he explores all forms and substances Straight homeward to their symbol-essences; He shall not die.
    16. Re:License missing by FunkyELF · · Score: 1

      Makes sense. Cyanogen should stop shipping with those apps. They are available in the Market anyway. Everyone is happy.
      I just got a MyTouch 3g and have yet to root it. I hope Cyanogen is still around when I get the time. I want tether!

    17. Re:License missing by mcgrew · · Score: 1, Redundant

      In some cases, failure to sufficiently defend one's rights to some IP (intellectual property) results in the inability to defend it in the future. I.e. If Google gets in the habit of knowingly allowing re-distribution of their applications with out a license, they set free any right to enforce the copyright in the future.

      1. The "some IP" is trademarks. You don't lose copyright by not defending it.
      2. Note that "loose" means to set free. You look like an illiterate. See my sig.
    18. Re:License missing by Mister+Whirly · · Score: 3, Funny

      Hey, you spelled "Apple" wrong.

      --
      "But this one goes to 11!"
    19. Re:License missing by cptdondo · · Score: 4, Funny

      I can't RTFM right now - slashdotted - but the TOS for using Google Maps for example is very explicit and very limited. (You can only use Google Maps from within browser, and you cannot cache the images.) Google doesn't necessarily own the data; they have licensing agreements with data providers. So Google has to uphold its agreement with the data providers.

      While I personally have abandonded using Google Maps for my project because of the license - something I find frustrating and disappointing - it is, after all, the agreeement Google must live by and enforce.

    20. Re:License missing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      He included the applications in the ROM. He is distributing closed source apps, that specifically are meant to only be distributed by Google themselves.

    21. Re:License missing by nabsltd · · Score: 2, Insightful

      You mean trademarks like Gmail(tm) and the Google(tm) logo? Which are almost certainly being distributed as part of those apps?

      And, so what?

      If I sell or give you a genuine boxed copy of Microsoft Windows(tm), what law am I breaking? And, if I choose to advertise the fact that I am selling that same product and want to use the trademarked name in my advertisement, Microsoft has no grounds to stop me. They can force me to specifically state that the name is trademarked by them, but that's all.

      Trademark exists not to protect businesses, but to protect consumers. That way, you know that if it says "Microsoft" or "Sony" or "Intel", or uses similar packaging, you won't be getting a product from some other company (like "Sorny"). And, this is the crux of why trademark has to be defended or else it is lost.

    22. Re:License missing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

      No they aren't. The only protected app available on the market is the Maps application.

      The main issue with this is that the android device is so tightly integrated with the Google Cloud and IIRC there is no API to recreate the Dialer app publicly available.

    23. Re:License missing by morgan_greywolf · · Score: 3, Informative

      Trademarks have nothing to do with distribution, or at least not in the way you think.

      If I buy a Nike T-Shirt. It has a Nike logo on it. If I sell it to you, did I just commit trademark infringement? No? Why not?

      I can write Gmail, Gmail, Gmail all day long and Google can't sue me so long as I'm referring to Google's product and I'm not using it to imply that I am the provider of or affiliated with Gmail or Google in any way.

      Now if the binaries are modified in anyway, they are NOT Gmail and Google Maps and Google Docs. At that point, I'm trying to pass off a derivative work as Gmail or Google Maps. Now I'm infringing on copyrights and trademarks!

    24. Re:License missing by Hadlock · · Score: 1

      Or a noise permit! >:) Having a noise permit for parties in highschool was (literally) a get out of jail free card.

      --
      moox. for a new generation.
    25. Re:License missing by jellomizer · · Score: 1

      Hey I know a genuine Penephonics when I see one.

      --
      If something is so important that you feel the need to post it on the internet... It probably isn't that important.
    26. Re:License missing by wrygrin · · Score: 2, Interesting

      i understand the bind that google/android is up against, and think it is terrible both in principle and in personal impact.

      in order to limit copy-access to android app executables, android depends on sequestering apps in phone storage. while most app producers don't care about limiting access to their executables (apk's), some commercial vendors do. (some common evidence of this is the way that most apps are available for copying by android backup programs like MyBackup Pro, but some aren't.) of course, root access defeats this sequestering - and, in fact, the biggest performance advantage on machines like my G1 is due to jiggering things, with symlinks, etc, so that app storage (as well as some resource cache storage) is physically on the SD card.

      the terrible bind is that, on phones like the G1, the phone-storage RAM (192 MB) is a critical resource shared across operational and storage functions, so that the phone works terribly if you have too many apps. and "too many", for a phone that's supposed to be very multi-purpose and extensible, is disturbingly few. it really is a fatal flaw - until i upgraded to cyanogen's mod, things like scrolling would fail to respond most of the time, returning to the home screen or starting an app could take on the order of minutes, etc. and this after i removed a lot of apps, including ones that were occasionally crucial. after upgrading to cyanogen the device works like an, um, dream. i can run everything i need, and more, and the phone is sliced-bread-caliber useful with quick, smooth responsiveness. happy dance!-) now they're bringing down the boot on my savior. darn.

      it seems obvious to me that google can't afford to allow undermining of their key provision for proprietary vendors who don't want their .apk's loose in the wild. it's a platform-policy agreement they made. it seems equally obvious to me that this is a damn shame - a profound architectural restriction solely for the purpose of a few overly restrictive vendors, who also happen to be some of the big vendors.

      (from many comments, elsewhere, about similar relief from upgrading to cyanogen, i see that my experience with the G1 is not unusual. going back to the standard android release is not an option, so figure i'll stick with my cyanogen install until my contract is up, sometime early next year, and by then there should be other android devices with a physical keyboard and without the cripplingly insufficient amount of RAM. i truly am sad that google is in this bind, and feel that the current arrangement for securing apk's is profoundly flawed, and finding a different approach deserves substantial effort.)

      ken

      --
      everything leaks
    27. Re:License missing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Bingo. Google has a bunch of lawyers that sit in a room making sure that the IP of google is protected. They found a case where a license was being violated, and responded as they are paid to do. I don't know why these kind of things always turn into a debate about whether a company is evil or not... this has nothing to do with that, and people need to stop reading so much into these kinds of cases.

      I didn't hear anyone bitching when the community went after D-Link or whoever that was for violating the terms of the GPL. This is a violation of licensing terms, and is being dealt with accordingly.

    28. Re:License missing by PitaBred · · Score: 1

      More than that. Google Maps uses data that Google licenses, and is only allowed to use in certain ways. If any of his apps or mods went afoul of Google's agreements, then they're obligated to put a stop to it. The article link is dead, so I can't verify if this is or isn't the case.

    29. Re:License missing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Because if someone else develops enhancements to Google's apps first, how is Google going to patent it?

    30. Re:License missing by Yvan256 · · Score: 2, Funny

      The word you're looking for is Panaphonics.

    31. Re:License missing by neo · · Score: 1, Interesting

      If I buy a Nike T-Shirt. It has a Nike logo on it. If I sell it to you, did I just commit trademark infringement? No? Why not?

      The difference is this. You buy Nike T-Shirts then print some slogan on them and then either sell them or give them away. What you've done is now made it appear the slogan is from Nike (or it's reasonable to assume people could be confused by it.)

      Yes, this is a problem, isn't it.

    32. Re:License missing by morgan_greywolf · · Score: 1

      Okay, so how does this apply to this situation? Only someone using their Android with a drool-proof shield wrapped around it could possibly think that the CyanogenMod ROM came from Google.

    33. Re:License missing by Trouvist · · Score: 1

      Very off topic, but you did reference your sig. I think you should go look up the English pronunciations of those words because:
      - "owl" doesn't sound like "oll", even remotely
      - "wise" doesn't sound like "ways", even remotely

      to me, sounding that signature out sounds like: I owel wize ewws a spill chucker so I no mai spelling is core wrecked"; note that "wrecked" and "recked" don't sound the same

      "always use a spell checker so I know my spelling is correct"

    34. Re:License missing by Troed · · Score: 1

      You seem to be confusing RAM and internal flash storage.

    35. Re:License missing by Orange+Crush · · Score: 1

      Except you can't access the market without the market app.

    36. Re:License missing by FatdogHaiku · · Score: 1

      Okay, so how does this apply to this situation? Only someone using their Android with a drool-proof shield wrapped around it could possibly think that the CyanogenMod ROM came from Google.

      Hey, where do I get one of those drool-proof shields?
      It would be handy when looking at m.xnxx.com, I mean sales figures... yeah, charts and graphs and stuff...

      --
      You have the right to remain sentient. If you give up the right to remain sentient, you will be elected to public office
    37. Re:License missing by 12345Doug · · Score: 1

      Not in this case it's one and the same.

    38. Re:License missing by jim_v2000 · · Score: 1

      "Google Maps, Google Talk and Gmail and so on require a license to distribute them."

      How does one distribute an online service?

      --
      Don't take life so seriously. No one makes it out alive.
    39. Re:License missing by Troed · · Score: 1

      No. The amount of apps you store would not affect the amount of RAM and vice versa, which is what you seem to imply in your post.

      the phone-storage RAM (192 MB) is a critical resource shared across operational and storage functions, so that the phone works terribly if you have too many apps

      vs

      Memory 192 MB DDR SDRAM 256 MB Flash

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/HTC_Dream

    40. Re:License missing by wrygrin · · Score: 1

      You seem to be confusing RAM and internal flash storage.

      i don't think so, but i could be mistaken.

      the specs are 192 MB RAM and 256 MB EEPROM. i believe that the eeprom holds the firmware loader and static OS elements, while the RAM is used for active operating memory and varying elements of the internal-phone filesystem, including apk storage, data caches for things like gmail and the browser, and so on.

      i can tell you that the space available for the .apks starts at something like 75 MB total. that's quickly consumed (with some substantial apps taking several MB apiece), and i experienced awful performance problems even though i left 12 to 17 MB (depending on how recently i cleared the caches).

      --
      everything leaks
    41. Re:License missing by wrygrin · · Score: 1

      (on second thought, i suppose the eeprom must be used, to preserve dynamic parts of the filesystem across reboots. in any case, the phone performance gets awful as apps increase.)

      --
      everything leaks
    42. Re:License missing by omega_dk · · Score: 1

      Citation or you're wrong.

      http://www.templetons.com/brad/copymyths.html (see #5)

      --
      Just because you don't like the truth, does not make it false.
    43. Re:License missing by blueskies · · Score: 1

      You mean like giving people free frisbees or Kleenexes or Legos?

    44. Re:License missing by Troed · · Score: 1

      You are mistaken. Maybe you're just running too much in the background (which is different from having many applications stored)

      If the amount of available RAM would decrease much below 192MB total you would not be able to start new applications at all ;)

      http://forums.androidandme.com/topic/how-much-free-memory-is-good

    45. Re:License missing by pookie13 · · Score: 1

      Goes bit offtopic but this reminds me of a Finnish electronic music band Pan Sonic. They had to change their name from Panasonic to Pan Sonic because they were threatened by Panasonic with a law suite.

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pansonic

      Like they would ever be mixed with each other.

    46. Re:License missing by omega_dk · · Score: 1

      Laches only applies (according to the US supreme court) in cases where there is no other statutory limit, unlike copyright. Until the US supreme court changes that precedent, laches does NOT apply to copyright.

      --
      Just because you don't like the truth, does not make it false.
    47. Re:License missing by cowboy76Spain · · Score: 1

      Which map do you use? I am still starting my project and it could happen that I need to display the data in a public map service (still have not done any analysis is Google Maps suits me or not?

      --
      Why can't /. have a rich-text editor? Editing your own HTML is so XXth century.
    48. Re:License missing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And ones which you lose the trademark to if you aren't seen to defend your rights? Those ones?

    49. Re:License missing by wrygrin · · Score: 1

      hmm. i'm running more in the background now than i was before, because there are some apps which have background jobs (eg, google voice, selfhelp) which i couldn't afford to have on the phone at all, space wise. no problems now, except for some problematic apps (eg, where).

      i would often try killing background tasks (using advanced task manager, very nice), but never got signficant improvement - to the point of killing all.

      --
      everything leaks
    50. Re:License missing by Wodin · · Score: 1, Flamebait

      [...]and learn how to spell "lose" (rhymes with "news") correctly.

      I agree on the spelling, but "lose" and "news" only rhyme if you're American.

      --
      -- Wodin
    51. Re:License missing by Troed · · Score: 1

      If you're comparing non-Cyanogen with Cyanogen remember that his mod does more than just making you able to transfer apps to SD-card when it comes to performance. Being an almost-Donut will result in quite a few speed improvements, as will using more CPU resources.

    52. Re:License missing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >Google is clearly within their rights to C&D over those applications.

      Well... there's a perception that you need some specific rights to write a C&D letter... but it's just a letter... ANYBODY can write a letter. The purpose of the C&D letter is simply that -- to show that you gave notice to someone by writing a C&D letter. And that may help you when you're seeking a court order, to show that you were a reasonable party, etc. But another way of looking at a C&D letter is to realize that the person who wrote it wasn't prepared yet, to ask a judge to order you to do something or stop doing something. The letter itself is meaningless, aside from its value as evidence that you've given notice of whatever you think your grievance is, which becomes necessary when you have to prove that the violation was knowingly done.

    53. Re:License missing by harlows_monkeys · · Score: 1

      The map data in Google Maps isn't Google's. Google licenses it from someone else. That license has restrictions on how the data can be used. For example, it can't be used for turn-by-turn GPS navigation, which is why all such programs on the iPhone come with their own map data.

      I suspect that the terms of the license Google has includes a clause that requires Google to vigorously protect the data. Even if there is no such requirement in the license, so that Google could just step back and leave it to the upstream to pursue Cyanogen, Google may not want to do that, out of fear that the upstream might decide it is easier to just cut Google off.

    54. Re:License missing by multisync · · Score: 2, Insightful

      You buy Nike T-Shirts then print some slogan on them and then either sell them or give them away. What you've done is now made it appear the slogan is from Nike (or it's reasonable to assume people could be confused by it.)

      Yes, this is a problem, isn't it.

      Huh?

      So I buy a Chevy car, put a "Breasts Not Bombs" bumper sticker on it, then either sell the car or give it away. According to you, what I've just done is made it appear the slogan is from Chevy, or it's reasonable to assume people could be confused by it.

      Or I buy a Dell Laptop, peel off the "Ready for Vista" sticker and put a Tux sticker on it, sell it to someone. Dell's going to stop me because their Trade Mark is on it? I don't think so.

      Even if Nike, Chevy or Dell could make the case that I was making it appear they endorsed the slogan, Trade Mark law wouldn't be relevant. Trade Mark law prevents me from selling a knock-off with someone's Trade Mark, or a confusingly similar mark, on it. What you're talking about is something entirely different, and frankly I don't think the manufacturer would have much say in the matter.

      --
      I don't care why you're posting AC
    55. Re:License missing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Now if the binaries are modified in anyway, they are NOT Gmail and Google Maps and Google Docs. At that point, I'm trying to pass off a derivative work as Gmail or Google Maps. Now I'm infringing on copyrights and trademarks!

      He properly covered himself from that case with the derivative work clause in his own post. Your work definitely falls under derivative work.

    56. Re:License missing by doom · · Score: 1

      Bingo. Google has a bunch of lawyers that sit in a room making sure that the IP of google is protected. They found a case where a license was being violated, and responded as they are paid to do. I don't know why these kind of things always turn into a debate about whether a company is evil or not... this has nothing to do with that, and people need to stop reading so much into these kinds of cases.

      In which case it's a sign that the company has been taken over by it's lawyers, who are not being restrained by any other concerns, e.g. public relations, and so on.

      Google's founding mythology is that it is different from the usual corporation. it's entirely appropriate that people continue to debate how well it's living up to it's pretensions. One reason you might prefer an Android to an iPhone is that the Android is not supposed to be locked down...

      There's a trend at the moment for everyone to put their entire virtual existence into Google's hands (gmail, google docs, Android). One of the reasons people are comfortable with this is Google's reputation for virtue. This kind of muscle-flexing makes one wonder about that.

    57. Re:License missing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You buy Nike T-Shirts then print some slogan on them and then either sell them or give them away. What you've done is now made it appear the slogan is from Nike (or it's reasonable to assume people could be confused by it.)

      Yes, this is a problem, isn't it.

      Are you high? Companies put their name and logo on branded apparel all the fucking time. Since Nike is an apparel provider, this would be perfectly reasonable. Look here you fucktard: If you're looking for one of the most elite apparel brands in the world, then Nike is the way to go. Nike is one of the most popular clothing brands, and it is known for its quality in sports and casual apparel. ePromos features their solid sports shirts in an array colors that your employees and clients are sure to love. Have your clients or employees sport your company's name and logo in style!

      Look here dickweed and note the shirt with the Nike "swooosh" all ready for your neo-nazi logo or whatever. Ass clown.

      "Do it to a Disney shirt!" you say! Well, you buy it without agreeing to defile it so do whatever the fuck you want.

    58. Re:License missing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      The curious question, though, is "why would they do so"
      Google want to control their platform. They don't mind if you develop software for their platform, but they still want to be in control of their platform. As usual these business moves always come back at their core to a need to control. Many corporate minded people suffer (some) openness as a way to get people to work for them (often for free) to help build up their platform, but they still want to be in control.

      Also its Wikipedia page has now been deleted - today.
      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CyanogenMod "This page has been deleted."

      Why because the Wikipedia isn't surely dependent on Google?. If Google and the Wikipedia are not careful, they are both going to get associated with the editing behaviour of the 1984 Ministry Of Truth.
      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ministry_of_truth

    59. Re:License missing by PCM2 · · Score: 1

      Right, and that's a legitimate copyright issue.

      But GP was talking about Google logos etc. -- and in that case, it's a trademark issue. If Google allows third parties to ship binary applications complete with Google trade dress, it risks losing its trademarks. Trademark law requires you to defend your trademarks to prove that you still want them; otherwise they revert to public domain.

      If there was a way for the modded OS to include versions of Google's apps recompiled with all the trademarked icons etc. removed, they could change the name to "IceGeeMail" or something, and they'd be in the clear. But there's no way to do that, since these are closed-source apps, so we're back to the aforementioned copyright issue.

      So you could argue that the folks at Google are kinda being dicks about the whole thing, but to be fair, they hardly have any choice in the matter.

      --
      Breakfast served all day!
    60. Re:License missing by PCM2 · · Score: 2, Informative

      If I sell or give you a genuine boxed copy of Microsoft Windows(tm), what law am I breaking?

      Possibly none. Microsoft might have a different opinion on the matter.

      But these guys aren't selling you a genuine boxed copy of the Google apps. They're selling you unlicensed copies which carry the Google trade dress, including logos and other collateral.

      You say, "So what? They're the same apps" -- which is exactly why trademark exists in the first place. Because it has registered trademarks, only Google is permitted to conduct trade using those marks. It doesn't matter if the binaries are bit-for-bit identical. Google gets to say whether the apps are "authentic" or not.

      --
      Breakfast served all day!
    61. Re:License missing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      FUCK THE CARRIERS, seriously. We need to force universal SIM CARDS and UNLOCKED PHONES on all devices for all carriers, now more than ever. CDMA works much better than GSM here in the USA but its a god damned shame that we have to struggle even more with carrier device locking to this degree due to lack of sim cards. I'll say it again: FUCK THE CARRIERS. WE WILL MOD OUR FUCKING PHONES ASSHOLES, ITS NONE OF YOUR CONCERN SO QUIT TRYING TO INTERFERE.

    62. Re:License missing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Oh noes, my .apks are out in the wild! These people need to be told to fucking stuff it, already. NOTE TO COMMERCIAL VENDORS: Your shit will be haxed, period. Take the money we give you and be happy. Quit holding back progress by worrying about shit like this..

    63. Re:License missing by dangitman · · Score: 2, Informative

      WTF? How do they pronounce it in other English speaking countries? I've heard plenty of British people say those words, and they still rhyme.

      --
      ... and then they built the supercollider.
    64. Re:License missing by dangitman · · Score: 1, Insightful

      It's amazing how quickly Slashdotters will rush to defend Google over anything. I notice you've made many other comments in this story defending Google. If this was Microsoft, they'd be portrayed as the greedy corporation exploiting software licenses to shut down freedom. When it's Google, we're supposed to shut our eyes and cover our ears. "Case closed."

      It's amazing how quickly slashdotters rush to bring out this tired trope whenever they read a comment they don't agree with, saying if it was [Company X] instead of [Company Y] then they'd be [outraged/gushing/the epitome of evil].

      Here's a tip: slashdot commenters don't have a hive mind, they are individuals with varying opinions.

      --
      ... and then they built the supercollider.
    65. Re:License missing by tagno25 · · Score: 1

      I bought a Google Dev Phone 1 for the ability to do just this! I use modded roms for the added benefits like multi-touch and root access control.

    66. Re:License missing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I can't RTFM right now - slashdotted - but the TOS for using Google Maps for example is very explicit and very limited. (You can only use Google Maps from within browser, and you cannot cache the images.

      So how can I be using it on my phone NOT in a web browser

    67. Re:License missing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Until we have a completely free and open phone software architecture, we will continue to see stories like this on the most "open" single-entity owned phone platform in the market. It's as simple as that.

    68. Re:License missing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's not wrong, it's British spelling. You Americans should learn to respect other cultures.

    69. Re:License missing by shrykk · · Score: 1

      Instead of moderating, I'd like to ask you politely to stop using the term 'intellectual property', unless you genuinely need a quick way to refer to all three of copyrights, trademarks and patents in one go.

      Enough confusion abounds already without mixing together the different rights and obligations of three different legal rights.

      In this case, some included trademarks might arguably need defending, but the same doesn't apply to copyrights. (With patents, I understand there is the issue of 'sleeping on your rights', laches, but that's another matter).

      --
      #define struct union /* Reduce memory usage */
    70. Re:License missing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      actually GoogleMaps is available on the android market....android market however is another proprietary application.

      Here's another question...why not ask Cyanogen to pay for the distribution license?

    71. Re:License missing by hvidstue · · Score: 1

      What ...? You need - a permit - to play ..? Sick world you live in :-S

    72. Re:License missing by laughingcoyote · · Score: 1

      No, case not closed. Firstly, the assertion of the ones behind cyanogen are that it distributes them only to devices already licensed to use them. I'm not a lawyer and I don't know if that makes any difference, but I doubt you are or know either. Google's granted a lot of "blanket" licensing for these applications.

      That being said, even if he's technically not licensed, I think the question is more "Is this a smart move on Google's part, even if they're technically legally correct?" One of the main reasons I've been considering an Android phone has been Apple's behavior with the iPhone, and the comparative openness of the Android platform. This gives me pause on doing it at all.

      But, all that being said, a lot better can be done than to complain here. If you think the decision sucks, tell Google.

      --
      To fight the war on terror, stop being afraid.
    73. Re:License missing by ajs · · Score: 1

      ... you could argue that the folks at Google are kinda being dicks about the whole thing, but to be fair, they hardly have any choice in the matter.

      I'm still not sure I'm seeing it. They have closed source apps on top of an open source OS. You are free to blow away the whole lot or write replacements for the closed source bits or re-write the open source bits or do whatever you like as long as you don't violate copyright law by re-packaging those closed source apps without a license. Someone did just that and Google asked them to stop.

    74. Re:License missing by RivieraKid · · Score: 1

      Well, here in Blighty, lose is pronounced with a long o, as in 'oo', while news is pronounced as n-use, or n-you-s.

      --
      "Necessity is the plea for every infringement of human freedom. It is the argument of tyrants; it is the creed of slaves
    75. Re:License missing by ScrewMaster · · Score: 1

      I can't RTFM right now - slashdotted - but the TOS for using Google Maps for example is very explicit and very limited. (You can only use Google Maps from within browser, and you cannot cache the images.

      So how can I be using it on my phone NOT in a web browser

      Presumably within a licensed proprietary application, such as Google Maps.

      --
      The higher the technology, the sharper that two-edged sword.
    76. Re:License missing by ScrewMaster · · Score: 1

      It's not wrong, it's British spelling. You Americans should learn to respect other cultures.

      You Brits spell Apple as M-I-C-R-O-S-O-F-T? Damn, I thought I was in trouble when my girlfriend asked me to stash her purse in the boot. Must be that whole Queen's English thing, I guess.

      --
      The higher the technology, the sharper that two-edged sword.
    77. Re:License missing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      in your country you would get busted for playing ball in the park with your friends?

      which country is this?

    78. Re:License missing by PCM2 · · Score: 1

      No, you're mistaken. Someone repackaged the whole thing without blowing away the closed-source apps. That's the only issue Google had with it.

      --
      Breakfast served all day!
  2. GPL Violation? by jonbryce · · Score: 0, Troll

    I thought Android was supposed to be Free Software / Open Source Software?

    1. Re:GPL Violation? by sopssa · · Score: 3, Informative

      Android itself is, but of course some software written for it can be closed or even, hold your breath, commercial.

      Google Maps, Google Talk and Gmail apps are closed software.

      And before someone jumps on the "but I want the whole thing to be open!!", its more open when developers have choices.

    2. Re:GPL Violation? by RiotingPacifist · · Score: 3, Informative

      Did you read the article? It clearly says that its todo with shipping google's closed apps like gmail/gmaps/etc. The OS is free but much of the software is not. Personally it seams pretty dumb to stop people handing out your free apps, but it is definitely within their rights.

      --
      IranAir Flight 655 never forget!
    3. Re:GPL Violation? by rehabdoll · · Score: 1

      "its more open when developers have choices."

      Not necessarily so for the user.

    4. Re:GPL Violation? by rjolley · · Score: 2, Informative

      "its more open when developers have choices."

      Not necessarily so for the user.

      That doesn't even make sense.

    5. Re:GPL Violation? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      its more open when developers have choices.

      No, it's not, you dick. The freedom that matters is the user's freedom.

    6. Re:GPL Violation? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      As your plumber, I find your bathroom to be more open when I have a choice to install a pay toilet.

      By the way, tell your daughter to quit climbing underneath the door. Those are MY fucking dimes she's stealing!

    7. Re:GPL Violation? by MathFox · · Score: 1

      How do you upgrade Android? Do you get a single firmware image from Google containing both the Linux kernel and the Google apps? If it is a single firmware image the GPL says that the full image should be distributable under the GPL. Denying someone the right to remix it would be a GPL violation!

      --
      extern warranty;
      main()
      {
      (void)warranty;
      }
    8. Re:GPL Violation? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No. Both sides' interests need to be balanced (you dick).

      Ideally in this instance, the ruling, should there need to be one, would be that Google forfeits no rights over its software, and the mods are allowed to continue on a non-comercial, chilled out basis. As now.

    9. Re:GPL Violation? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

      its more open when developers have choices.

      No, it's not, you dick. The freedom that matters is the user's freedom.

      Now now.. While I agree with your statement. You really should address it to the poster, not his sexual organ that may or may not exist.

    10. Re:GPL Violation? by daskinil · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Umm, Linux is the same way, developers have the freedom to write a closed source app for it. Which is good. Otherwise I wouldn't have matlab on linux. Which is an industry standard for many engineering applications. So this is really not too news worthy, Google has closed source apps and open source apps. Just because a company has some OSS apps, doesn't mean they can't defend the rest of their apps.

    11. Re:GPL Violation? by Vexorian · · Score: 2, Insightful
      I think you were meaning to reply the parent post.

      its more open when developers have choices.

      THAT doesn't make any sense.

      --

      Copyright infringement is "piracy" in the same way DRM is "consumer rape"
    12. Re:GPL Violation? by Vexorian · · Score: 1

      "but I want the whole thing to be open!!", its more open when developers have choices.

      "-1 false dichotomy. "

      --

      Copyright infringement is "piracy" in the same way DRM is "consumer rape"
    13. Re:GPL Violation? by FlyingBishop · · Score: 2, Insightful

      All the user cares about is data. If I can switch from your mail app to my mail app without losing my data, the system is open. However, if the developer has the choice of whatever mail format it wants, it's unlikely that I can transfer my data without issue. Thus, choice for the developer does not equal choice for the user.

    14. Re:GPL Violation? by Runaway1956 · · Score: 1

      Once an android is modded, can't the user download gmail and whatever else from Google directly, for installation? I don't own an android, much less a modded one - I'm kinda ignorant here.....

      --
      "Windows is like the faint smell of piss in a subway: it's there, and there's nothing you can do about it." - Charlie Br
    15. Re:GPL Violation? by smartr · · Score: 1

      It is. It's under the Apache License. Nothing in the Apache License says anything about not working with proprietary software.

    16. Re:GPL Violation? by Tony+Hoyle · · Score: 1

      Umm.. no.

      It's an image. If your interpretation were correct redhat couldn't distribute an ISO of RHEL with non-GPL apps on it, devices with embedded linux would be impossible, etc.

    17. Re:GPL Violation? by mdm-adph · · Score: 1

      For the most part, aye -- I know you can download Maps independently from the Market (have to do this every now and then for an upgrade).

      I really don't see the big idea with this -- just unbunble the apps, and let's get back to work. You can use the damn web browser to access gmail on your phone if you need to, anyway.

      --
      It is by my will alone my thoughts acquire motion; it is by the juice of the coffee bean that the thoughts acquire speed
    18. Re:GPL Violation? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Do you get a single firmware image from Google containing both the Linux kernel and the Google apps? If it is a single firmware image the GPL says that the full image should be distributable under the GPL.

      No, it doesn't support this at all. In fact, it explicitly says the opposite.

      Denying someone the right to remix it would be a GPL violation!

      The copyright holder can violate their own software license all they want. The GPL can't force the copyright holder to do anything.

    19. Re:GPL Violation? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, the 'single firmware image' would still just be a collection, which can legally contain GPL and non-GPL stuff. It's the exact same situation as a CD.

    20. Re:GPL Violation? by bennomatic · · Score: 1

      I think you were meaning to reply the parent post.

      its more open when developers have choices.

      THAT doesn't make any sense.

      Now even I'm confused!

      --
      The CB App. What's your 20?
    21. Re:GPL Violation? by bennomatic · · Score: 1

      its more open when developers have choices.

      No, it's not, you dick. The freedom that matters is the user's freedom.

      Developers are people to! And so are corporations! Won't someone PLEASE think of the corporations?

      Of course, the user has the ultimate freedom, which is to use something other than the product which is not open enough to suit their needs.

      --
      The CB App. What's your 20?
    22. Re:GPL Violation? by bennomatic · · Score: 1

      Hey, if you put 1000 monkeys in front of a thousand computers for 1000 years, who's to say you wouldn't have gotten Matlab anyway?

      Oh, wait. Do monkeys live for 1000 years?

      --
      The CB App. What's your 20?
    23. Re:GPL Violation? by aristotle-dude · · Score: 2, Informative

      I thought Android was supposed to be Free Software / Open Source Software?

      The original copyright holder is not bound by the GPL as long as they are either the only contributor, have all copyrights assigned before a change is accepted or has agreement from all holders of copyright. The GPL only applies to other people who are not the original authors. But this is not about open source code but rather coded source google apps distributed with android.

      --
      Jesus was a compassionate social conservative who called individuals to sin no more.
    24. Re:GPL Violation? by trickyD1ck · · Score: 0

      You both are dicks. If anything, GPL gives freedom to the Code, not to any humans involved.

    25. Re:GPL Violation? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes its a bit curious to stop someone distributing apps you provide for free but I would suggest this is more of a 'protect our butts in case something goes wrong with one of the copies of our apps that he gave out' then it is 'that's our trademark we will squish you for looking at it'

    26. Re:GPL Violation? by lgw · · Score: 2, Funny

      Oh, wait. Do monkeys live for 1000 years?

      Hey, you could at least bother to read the RFC before asking such a pointless question! RFC 2795 handles such things transparently. Under the hood you'd see:

                  BoBoSIM> SEND FOOD
                  SanDiego> ACCEPT
                  BoBoSIM> SEND MEDICINE
                  SanDiego> DELAY
                  BoBoSIM> SEND VETERINARIAN
                  SanDiego> REFUSE
                  BoBoSIM> SEND VETERINARIAN
                  SanDiego> REFUSE
                  BoBoSIM> NOTIFY NORESPONSE
                  SanDiego> ACCEPT
                  BoBoSIM> NOTIFY DEAD
                  SanDiego> ACCEPT
                  BoBoSIM> REPLACE MONKEY
                  SanDiego> ACCEPT

      But the ZOO abstracts all that so you don't have to care.

      --
      Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.
    27. Re:GPL Violation? by doom · · Score: 1

      or even, hold your breath, commercial.

      You mean, "proprietary".

    28. Re:GPL Violation? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Umm, Linux is the same way, developers have the freedom to write a closed source app for it. Which is good. Otherwise I wouldn't have matlab on linux. Which is an industry standard for many engineering applications. So this is really not too news worthy, Google has closed source apps and open source apps. Just because a company has some OSS apps, doesn't mean they can't defend the rest of their apps.

      Ultimately, this is not about copyright, or the legitimacy or otherwise of Google's actions. In a lot of ways, it's similar to how people of other countries have perceived America since World War II: we did a lot of good things at the time, such that they expected better of us. They were right to think that way: there are many situations since which we should have handled more gracefully, but did not. So, most of us here are not disputing that Google has the legal right to go after a modder for this reason, any less than Apple or Microsoft who do the same thing. It's just that we wanted to think better of Google, who after all made a point of claiming that they are better. We want Google, especially in a fairly high-profile situation such as this one, to behave with grace and class.

      We'll see. This may play out better than we expect at the moment. It's good that Google doesn't appear to be trying to nail the guy to a cross, which is how Apple would likely have handled this. I am irritated, however, that as a G1 owner who has already licensed the applications in question, I may lose one of the major reasons that I went with Android in the first place. Furthermore, I'm not interested in some hack that will allow me to back up my existing licensed apps and restore them: I'd likely lose the benefit of Google's periodic updates. It sucks, but I may end up with another brand of smartphone. Too bad ... I like my G1, and I went with it largely on the strength of Google's reputation.

      Google should tread very carefully here. This has the potential for a major PR disaster. Apparently there are some thirty-thousand Cyanogen users, most of whom (one would assume) are reasonably competent technically. The kind of individuals that other people turn to for recommendations. Face it, thirty-odd thousand technojocks recommending your product to thousands more is not a force to be treated lightly, not to mention the potential damage to Google's overall image if they botch this. Google's Android doesn't have the benefit of untold millions of rabid fans such as Apple enjoys: they have to convince us that they can be trusted to play square with us. If not ... well, it's a competitive market, isn't it.

      Google already won the battle: Cyanogen immediately withdrew his download page and is cooperating fully. They could, however, lose the war.

    29. Re:GPL Violation? by chrisinspace · · Score: 1

      You can get some apps, but not others. If there is no way to get all of the apps, you are essentially crippling the device. The biggest problem I would see is that the phone's address book (all of your contact information) is synced from GMail contacts. If this is disabled, you would lose a lot of functionality.

  3. Capitalism means crisis by For+a+Free+Internet · · Score: 1, Funny

    Google is trying to postpone the inevitable crash of its hyperinflated fictitious capital.

    Only a planned economy under workers Soviet control can provide for the needs of all and advance human culture.

    Reforge the Fourth International, world party of socialist revolution!

    --
    UNITE with the Campaign for a Free Internet because today, our future begins with tomorrow!
    1. Re:Capitalism means crisis by PhreakOfTime · · Score: 5, Insightful
      Neither do fiat currencies. They all end up crumbling in exactly the same way.

      Did your history book also mention that?

      So, since ALL systems of humanity eventually fail, wouldnt it be more important to look at the quality of life that exists under these systems for the brief periods that they exist?

    2. Re:Capitalism means crisis by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Planned economies do not work. End of story. Crack a history book sometime.

      All economies are planned to some extent, and none are completely.

    3. Re:Capitalism means crisis by CannonballHead · · Score: 1, Offtopic

      quality of life that exists under these systems for the brief periods that they exist?

      Ah... but just how brief are those brief periods, and just how bloody are the times surrounding the brief periods? It seems that communism tends to be quite bloody surrounding the "brief" times of peace and "prosperity." Incidentally, I'm not sure how many communist countries have been prosperous. For people other than the leaders, I mean.

      And by the way, you're still going to have terrorists and the like, even if USA was communist. The current wacko Islamic terrorists aren't anti-USA because of capitalism and because of how inhumane the USA is or something.

    4. Re:Capitalism means crisis by gunnk · · Score: 1, Offtopic

      Actually, a fiat currency IS a type of planned economy. With a fiat currency the government can manipulate the value of its currency. In many, many cases said government finally gets too greedy and manipulates the currency to the point that no one trusts it and the value plummets towards zero. In any case, though, controlling the nominal value of the currency is a tool governments with fiat currencies use to manipulate (i.e.: plan) their economy.

      I think fiat currencies are inherently risky due to the high probability of government overreach, but I disagree with your comment that all fiat currencies are doomed to fail. The only failed fiat currencies that can be mentioned in history books are those that have failed. Ones that haven't failed still exist, so their failure is not recorded. You therefore cannot invoke history to claim that all fiat currencies fail as long as there are fiat currencies still in existence that have been viable for long time periods. (This is not to say they won't fail, only the the "history shows" argument is fallacious).

      Finally, saying that "all systems of humanity eventually fail" suffers from the same sort of problems. I can point to many human systems that have existed for millennia and continue to work for us (think agriculture, trade, language, writing... none have passed away and few seem destined to do so in the foreseeable future).

      --
      Life is short: void the warranty.
    5. Re:Capitalism means crisis by Dragonslicer · · Score: 1

      It seems that communism tends to be quite bloody surrounding the "brief" times of peace and "prosperity." Incidentally, I'm not sure how many communist countries have been prosperous.

      That's because none of them were truly socialist (using the "trying to do what benefits society as a whole" definition), but evil dictatorships that used the promises of Communism to seize control from the previously existing economic powers. For better examples, take a look at some European countries (and other European-style countries such as Canada).

    6. Re:Capitalism means crisis by Anonymous+Codger · · Score: 1

      Two possible responses to this:

      1. WHOOSH

      2. To be serious, there are two lessons we should have learned from the history of the past 150 years.
              a. Communism doesn't work.
              b. Capitalism doesn't work.
      What does work is a system in which capitalism drives the economy, but a strong central government keeps the capitalists in check.

      --
      No sig? Sigh...
    7. Re:Capitalism means crisis by nedlohs · · Score: 4, Insightful

      You mean like China?

    8. Re:Capitalism means crisis by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      DA! Mien Fuher -1 for stupidity

    9. Re:Capitalism means crisis by PhreakOfTime · · Score: 1

      agriculture - slash-and-burn - while not faded away, contains the seeds of its own destruction and is not practiced on a large-scale as it has been replaced by other systems

      Language - latin - its not called a dead language for nothing. Replaced by another, and more efficient system of language

      Writing - Hieroglyphics - Not around anymore either. Also replaced by a more efficient system of writing.

      ALL of those things failed, and were replaced by other systems. The structure of the current money supply will also fail, and be replaced by a more efficient system. Im not predicting when that will happen, just that it will happen. Just like it has happened to every system throughout history. Its the basic definition of progress. Sometimes it comes from whats best known as 'creative destruction', sometimes it comes about gradually.

      I understand what you are trying to say, but think of it this way. Is it any different to say that ALL suns will die, and knowing the fundamental reasons why, to also say that our own sun will die? Sure history hasnt shown that our sun has died yet, so is the understanding of the underlying reasons for making that statement somehow negated ? The point I am making, and that you seem to also understand, is that there is a fundamental flaw in the way that a fiat currency works in a society. That flaw eventually leads to its demise.

      *The Federal Reserve isnt any more 'federal' than Federal Express is. They are both corporations. Its not government that is inflating the values of fiat currencies.

    10. Re:Capitalism means crisis by nomadic · · Score: 1

      Language - latin - its not called a dead language for nothing. Replaced by another, and more efficient system of language

      Latin isn't inefficient; it's actually a fairly well-constructed language with far more logical consistency than the languages that sprang from it.

      The point I am making, and that you seem to also understand, is that there is a fundamental flaw in the way that a fiat currency works in a society. That flaw eventually leads to its demise.

      That's not a point, it's an opinion.

    11. Re:Capitalism means crisis by CannonballHead · · Score: 1

      using the "trying to do what benefits society as a whole" definition

      There's a human-nature problem with expecting that. I think that's where a lot of "communism" fails. It's difficult to set up a system that deals with human nature correctly. Of course, that depends on what you think human nature is...

    12. Re:Capitalism means crisis by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      On what planet do you spend most of your time? Can you explain how EFFICIENCY (rather than politics) was the primary factor behind the demise of spoken Latin and written heiroglyphics?

      I fail to see how Russian, for instance, is significantly more efficient than Latin. Also, Hanzi is at least as complex and nuanced as heiroglyphics were.

    13. Re:Capitalism means crisis by Rue+C+Koegel · · Score: 1

      u can't claim that ALL systems of humanity fail, many have never been allowed to function to their designed purpose... perspectively u could say then that they already failed... but then u'd be an a$$hat!

      many were overtaken by other brute forces that replaced them, despite their ability to function just fine... just because somebody decided to be an a$$hat.

      plus since humanity is still ticking along not ALL human systems have failed or we wouldn't exist today, and you wouldn't be able to make such blatantly ridiculous remarks on slashdot!

      --
      DON'T CAPITALIZE! CO-OPERATE! AND FREE EVERYTHING!
    14. Re:Capitalism means crisis by Dragonslicer · · Score: 1

      There's a human-nature problem with expecting that. I think that's where a lot of "communism" fails. It's difficult to set up a system that deals with human nature correctly. Of course, that depends on what you think human nature is...

      Absolutely. That is, by the way, exactly why I used the word "trying". Personally, I think many of the basic principles of socialism are nice ideals, but I know that it's somewhere between very difficult and impossible to get them to work in the real world. And of course, anything can be ruined by power-hungry or corrupt leaders, which would really be the complete opposite of communism.

    15. Re:Capitalism means crisis by Chyeld · · Score: 1

      agriculture - slash-and-burn - while not faded away, contains the seeds of its own destruction and is not practiced on a large-scale as it has been replaced by other systems

      Language - latin - its not called a dead language for nothing. Replaced by another, and more efficient system of language

      Writing - Hieroglyphics - Not around anymore either. Also replaced by a more efficient system of writing.

      ALL of those things failed, and were replaced by other systems. The structure of the current money supply will also fail, and be replaced by a more efficient system. Im not predicting when that will happen, just that it will happen. Just like it has happened to every system throughout history. Its the basic definition of progress. Sometimes it comes from whats best known as 'creative destruction', sometimes it comes about gradually.

      For someone who names themselves PhreakOfTime, you have an... interesting view of it. Latin died because the Roman Empire died. It had nothing to do with inefficiencies, simply a lack of an overarching group to maintain it. You may have heard of this nifty class of languages called the "Romance Languages". Want to guess why they are called that?

      Here's a clue (well more of a spoiler): it's because they are based on Latin and were formed after the fall of the Empire allowed regional dialects to be created. Each and every one was formed from Latin, each and everyone diverged, not because it was 'better' but because that's how the people in the area spoke.

      Hieroglyphics died because the cultures that used them was no longer in existence. Amusingly, the folk responsible for this were...The ROMANS. The various cultures that used them may not have been wiped from the Earth, but the Romans did a very good job of converting their holdings to their system of doing things.

      And you don't even touch on the matter of Asian sinographs.

      If your theory actually held water, Latin would have been universally replaced by something more akin to Esperanto not "American" English, which at best is a mis-mash of many influences and other (often seemingly incompatible) language rules.

      For the most part, systems are not replaced by 'better systems' they are replaced by 'the winner's systems' which may or may not be better than what they are replacing. But it doesn't matter because the criteria isn't "what's better" it's "how do the rulers do it"

    16. Re:Capitalism means crisis by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There's a human-nature problem with expecting that. I think that's where a lot of "communism" fails. It's difficult to set up a system that deals with human nature correctly. Of course, that depends on what you think human nature is...

      It's a fairly simple call to make, though, isn't it? If people still insist on selling their goods and labor despite the fact that you've threatened to shoot them for doing so, it's safe to say your system is contrary to human nature.

    17. Re:Capitalism means crisis by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There's a human-nature problem with expecting that. I think that's where a lot of "communism" fails. It's difficult to set up a system that deals with human nature correctly.

      Which is precisely Capitalism's problem as well.

    18. Re:Capitalism means crisis by PhreakOfTime · · Score: 1

      Yes, using the roman empire as a counter argument to a failed system was very amusing. Thank you.

      And you don't even touch on the matter of Asian sinographs.

      Thats proabably because the topic of discussion did not include Asian sinographs. What would you like to discuss about Asian sinographs, since you brought it up? You seem to be implying that it has been rock solid and based on identical methodologies throught time, without any fundamental changes whatsoever.

      Every single topic you touched on is referring to a failed system being replaced by another system. I never discussed the WHY of the failed systems. As you pointed out in the reasoning behind the fracturing behind latin, it evolved into other types of language based on the local variations in the populace that existed, when their previous system failed

      In a failed fiat system, the need for trade will not go away. Existing needs will be handled by using the new system that evolves out of the current needs of the populace, just like it has throughout history(per your previously mentioned examples) and just like it will continue to do as long as systems of ideas created by the human mind exist. Will it be a step forward, or a step back? Thats not for me to say, the point is, that it will be a step.

      Systems fail. Always. New systems (hopefully) arise to replace the required need that was previously provided by those failed systems. Im not entirely sure why you are taking a posture of argument against that.

    19. Re:Capitalism means crisis by Zerth · · Score: 1

      The only thing China does to keep capitalists in check is shoot the embarrassing failures.

      Move some the points they put into "Oppression of free speech" into "Corporate Bitchslapping" skill.

      What country does that look like?

    20. Re:Capitalism means crisis by CannonballHead · · Score: 1

      Yes, but I happen to think capitalism does a better job of accounting for human nature than communism does. A system based ON greed may compensate for it a little better than a system that hopes greed goes away. Which it apparently doesn't, even in the idealistic people that think up these "greed-less" systems and become the rulers of them. :)

    21. Re:Capitalism means crisis by Darkness404 · · Score: 1

      How doesn't capitalism work? Pure capitalism works just fine and dandy. Its only when the governments screw with it do problems occur. The great depression had more to do with WWI, various government actions and regulations than pure capitalism. Similarly, the recent economic meltdown could have been avoided by reducing regulations in the first place. Also, communism does work, however communism only works when A) You have a self-sufficient country (needing no imports/exports) B) A closed country (little to no international trade/travel) and C) A government who doesn't wildly spend on unnecessary things. Soviet Russia pretty much had A, for a while had B but ended up blowing all their funds on various non-essential projects (More nukes than necessary, space travel, various "proxy" wars, etc) which led to it collapsing.

      --
      Taxation is legalized theft, no more, no less.
    22. Re:Capitalism means crisis by lenester · · Score: 1

      Corporatism is not capitalism. Nor can any system be which uses a fiat currency. Ironically the strongest bastions of capitalism in the modern world are back-to-basics communities who make extensive use of barter.

    23. Re:Capitalism means crisis by Chyeld · · Score: 1

      Unless your definition of fail is simply 'changed' then nothing you've just said is accurate. If it is, then you need to stop redefining words.

      The Romance Languages were not created as a result of a 'failure' of Latin. They were created because the people who spoke Latin around the world no longer intermingled as much as they did during the height of the Roman empire and thus small changes in accent, wording, and etc. eventually becamed enshirined in each locality as 'the language'. This wasn't EVOLUTION, it wasn't the replacement of a weaker system by a better one, which is the typical definition of evolution when used in this sense.

      And if you don't know what an asian sinograph is, then perhaps you shouldn't get all snippity when I bring it up.

      The number of Chinese characters contained in the Kangxi dictionary is approximately 47,035...

      If your arguement was "Hieroglyphics failed because they are inefficent" then what is your explaination for the continued existance and use of the Chinese writting system? It is just as old and 'inefficent' as hieroglyphs, and yet is still used.

    24. Re:Capitalism means crisis by lgw · · Score: 1

      "Pure capitalism" is self-quenching. Until we invent the uncorruptable goverment, economic power becomes political power, so large and successful companies influence the law taking the system away from "pure capitalism" to create barriers to competition.

      Corruption affects all human systems. The main advantage of capitalism over communism (and it's a huge one, given the experience of the 20th century) is that it fails more gracefully as it becomes corrupt. But market regulation is just using corrupt system A to police corrupt system B, when B can influence A, so it's not helping much. What we need is a genuinly new idea for a corruption-resistant system given human nature.

      --
      Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.
    25. Re:Capitalism means crisis by PhreakOfTime · · Score: 1

      Fail -

      1. disappoint, prove undependable to; abandon, forsake
      2. stop operating or functioning

      Im glad you were able to read a wiki article on sinographs, but that still does not mean that there have been not many permutations of sinographs over thousands of years, with the older ones having fallen into non-use and being replaced by the current version that is now used and recognized. Im sure some editor put that in a wikipedia entry on sinographs somwhere, since its a fairly well understood fact of historical observations of sinographs through time. Keep digging, you might learn something new about them besides the one line wiki entry you copied.

      In other words, they 'failed' or were 'abandoned' for the better way of doing things.

      Seriously, what is it that you are arguing? Systems fail, they are replaced by a better version that doesnt 'fail' to account for the variations not taken into account by the previous version. Those systems fail, those systems are replaced.... etc, and so on

    26. Re:Capitalism means crisis by Darkness404 · · Score: 1

      The only way you make a government that cannot be corrupted is to limit the powers of the government to a small amount. The constitution of the US tried to do that, but yet the document had many flaws and loopholes over the years that let the government become more corrupt.

      --
      Taxation is legalized theft, no more, no less.
    27. Re:Capitalism means crisis by CAIMLAS · · Score: 1

      How can you expect a "truly socialist" country to try what benefits the -society- as a whole? That has never, ever been the means to an end attempted by socialists; it's NOWHERE within the dogma of the biggest minds in socialist thought. Socialism, in its many guises, has always been about "righting a wrong" by taking from one group of people and giving it to another which did nothing to earn that state-sanctioned gift than to belong to said group.

      --
      ~/ssh slashdot.org ssh: connect to host slashdot.org port 22: too many beers
    28. Re:Capitalism means crisis by krenshala · · Score: 1

      Just because something evolved doesn't mean it got better. Evolution is change, so when your language changes, for whatever reason, then it has evolved. Phreak summed it up pretty well for the Romance languages (as did you, from a slightly different perspective, btw).

      As for his use of failure, while I don't think many people think of it the way he does, it doesn't seem to be an unreasonable description of what happened. Rome (the empire) failed, and thus the Roman language (latin) changed -- failure leading to change, as local dialects replaced "official" latin.

      --

      krenshala

    29. Re:Capitalism means crisis by youn · · Score: 1

      lol, for the fun I make that claim, all systems of humanity will eventually fail, we're doomed. Ask anyone.

      Religious people will talk about armageddon type of events
      Physicists will talk about our solar system collapsing, the universe "blowing up" eventually
      Historians will talk about the rise and fall of civilisations
      flskdjflisks will talk about ââlzkjikjrlzkejzrzrz

      heck, ask the assyrians, we found a tablet 5000 years ago that said the end of the world is near

      We're all doomed! Of course, I think I still have time for a confortable diner before that ;)

      --
      Never antropomorphize computers, they do not like that :p
    30. Re:Capitalism means crisis by toriver · · Score: 1

      Pure capitalism doesn't work because the capitalists run crying to Mommy State whenever they lose money instead of taking the bankruptcy on the chin and move on. There are no pure capitalists, just groups of lobbyists trying to have laws made that benefit them.

      Case in point: When Bush Jr. imposed tariffs on imported steel to cushion the relatively few steel PRODUCING jobs at the cost of the larger steel CONSUMING industries which no longer could get cheap steel.

      And don't get me started on food subsidies.

    31. Re:Capitalism means crisis by nedlohs · · Score: 1

      France?

    32. Re:Capitalism means crisis by rohan972 · · Score: 1

      The central banking system we have in the so called capitalist countries is a feature of communism[1] designed to transform the country to communism. You haven't seen the failure of capitalism, what you are seeing is the success of a communist strategy to destroy capitalism.

      [1] same applies to free government schooling and progressive income tax. Reference: "The Communist Manifesto"

    33. Re:Capitalism means crisis by lgw · · Score: 1

      Ah, but that's not a corruption-resistant government, that's merely a small government, and governments only grow over time. From very small roots our government is now seriously considering setting wages and prices in huge industries such as banking and health care.

      --
      Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.
    34. Re:Capitalism means crisis by Rue+C+Koegel · · Score: 1

      and since ur comfortable dinner is all that really matters, everything is going to be alright. and all those people u referred to previously, who think everything is 'going to hell' tomorrow are totally wrong.

      ~starts to sing~

      i live understanding that pretty much 'anything' is possible, but it's generally people that 'believe' negative stuff is going to happen that put the most amount of effort into making negative stuff actually occur. whereas those whom merely recognize the possibility but choose to work towards the opposite, have the opposite effect. and those that truly believe everything is going to be alright are generally totally willing to be complacent and let bad things happen anyway.

      so the question really isn't whether it's all going to end poorly tomorrow or not, but whether your 'comfortable dinner' is good for u or not, cause u might have a long life of suffering ahead of u if u make bad choices now.

      i mean come on. would u rather have everything end tomorrow knowing everything was going swimmingly when it ended, or let everything go to hell even though it might stay that way forever?

      --
      DON'T CAPITALIZE! CO-OPERATE! AND FREE EVERYTHING!
  4. Do no evil? by guruevi · · Score: 1

    Apparently they have C&D'd Slashdot as well since it's acting flakey today and yesterday.

    This is another reason why we want/need an open design to many of our gadgets. We're relying too much on them but only one big corporation has full control over them. Same goes for Google Docs. If Google decides to pull the plug on any of their systems, you lose.

    --
    Custom electronics and digital signage for your business: www.evcircuits.com
    1. Re:Do no evil? by iamhigh · · Score: 1

      Isn't that all part of it? You have to select the people that you want to do business with. Sure google could shut down gmail or docs tomorrow, but I don't think they will. Sure my ISP could close up shop, godaddy could blow up, my accountant might get hit by a bus...

      You will never mitigate all the risks... but instead of me worrying about DNS, Hosting/Colo, the code, the server(s), the disk space, the db, the backups, and on and on and on... I have outsourced those worries to google in return for a small risk they may unexpectedly shut down some day. If you have taken the proper steps to mitigate that risk (simple offline backups of your docs/email) then you have no issues.

      I certainly don't see this as a reason to start the evil mantra again.

      --
      No comprende? Let me type that a little slower for you...
    2. Re:Do no evil? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ZOHO is your friend

    3. Re:Do no evil? by ceoyoyo · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Wrong end. When you're talking about something that needs to use a network to be useful, you've got to start at the network. The device is the LEAST important part. As long as the phone company gets to say what does or does not run on their network the devices will do what they need to meet those requirements.

      It's kind of funny actually - Apple releases a closed phone but doesn't sick the lawyers on any of the hackers. Google releases an "open" phone but does sick the lawyers on the hackers.

    4. Re:Do no evil? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      AWWWW Mommy said I could chant the evil mantra today.

    5. Re:Do no evil? by SteveTauber · · Score: 1

      Fortunately for the consumer the FCC ruled that Wireless providers must begin to allow any device on their network. We are also now seeing legislation for official Network Neutrality.

    6. Re:Do no evil? by royler · · Score: 1

      Apple has taken action against people jailbraking the phone, and doing so is clearly against the rules. that solidifies their legal hold on their product. if google does not sue someone who is distributing their software, that could be used against them if someone ever does distribute the software illegally.

    7. Re:Do no evil? by BigRedFed · · Score: 1

      WTF are you talking about? Apple sued the modders for a similar reason. story

    8. Re:Do no evil? by manekineko2 · · Score: 4, Interesting

      What's even more funny is that Microsoft, a company hardly synonymous with openness, has long tolerated ROM modders doing the exact same thing on Windows Mobile. Heck, it's far more extreme, as ROM modders on Windows Mobile have been building ROMs off of unreleased versions of WinMo 6.5.1 and including things like Microsoft Office for WinMo in its entirety, and Microsoft hasn't complained.

      Meanwhile, the self-annointed Do-No-Evil Google with its open Android system is releasing the lawyers.

      When both Apple and Microsoft are more open than you are, even only about a certain aspect of your product, that's not a good sign. It's sad, but Windows Mobile is really the most open mainstream mobile OS out there these days.

    9. Re:Do no evil? by mcgrew · · Score: 1

      Sorry, I'm afraid that's my fault. I linked slashdot from slashdot and slashdotted it.

      Sorry again.

    10. Re:Do no evil? by ceoyoyo · · Score: 1

      That's an excellent step 1, and it might just be enough. Unfortunately I suspect there might be a step 2 - disallowing the carriers from distributing their own customized (locked) phones. Not only do you have to be able to use an arbitrary device on the network, in any way you see fit, but there also has to be a demand for such devices.

      If you get both of those accomplished then there's no reason at all why the handset manufacturers wouldn't compete on features the same way computer manufacturers do. Tethering? Of COURSE we can do that. Want to run bittorrent on your phone? Go for it!

    11. Re:Do no evil? by indros13 · · Score: 1

      Wrong end. When you're talking about something that needs to use a network to be useful, you've got to start at the network. The device is the LEAST important part. As long as the phone company gets to say what does or does not run on their network the devices will do what they need to meet those requirements.

      It's kind of funny actually - Apple releases a closed phone but doesn't sick [sic] the lawyers on any of the hackers. Google releases an "open" phone but does sick [sic] the lawyers on the hackers.

      First time I've ever been able to show the replacement word and the error notation in the same brackets.
      -Grammar Nazi

      --
      Under capitalism man exploits man. Under communism it's the other way around.
    12. Re:Do no evil? by ceoyoyo · · Score: 1

      Apple has made a few general legal statements of position, but I'm not aware of them actually going after any individuals or groups. Do you have a reference for that?

      Sure, Google has to assert their ownership, etc, blah, legal reasons, etc. It still sounds like excuses. If they're worried about it why don't they (why didn't they in the first place?) make it easy to distribute just Android with the apps, and then distribute their free-but-only-distributable-by-us apps separately in some easily installed way? Instead their solution is to C&D a major figure in their "open source" project? Hm. It's not much of an open source project if you can't actually contribute and distribute modifications.

    13. Re:Do no evil? by ceoyoyo · · Score: 1

      Read the article. Apple hit the site for using their trademarks, NOT for posting, distributing or otherwise being involved with jailbreaking. That is NOT a similar reason. Google cease and desisted this guy for distributing software.

    14. Re:Do no evil? by ceoyoyo · · Score: 1

      Yeah, that's a very interesting data point. My theory is that Windows mobile didn't look like it was going to be used by more than a niche group of mostly business people and so it didn't scare the pants off the carriers that it would reveal the incredible amount of overselling they do. The iPhone and Android are a different ballgame because they're marketed to EVERYONE.

    15. Re:Do no evil? by ceoyoyo · · Score: 1

      Ha, very good. See what Slashdot does to your literacy?

      Maybe it's just because "sick" and "lawyers" go so well together.

    16. Re:Do no evil? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      B-b-b-but Google isn't Evil!

    17. Re:Do no evil? by HitoGuy · · Score: 1

      I don't think they can legally stop them from modifying their own property. If Apple doesn't like it, they can void a warranty. I am not aware of any law on the books that says one can't modify an iPhone.

      --
      I am beginning to think that maybe Darl McBride was attacked viciously by a penguin as a child.
    18. Re:Do no evil? by TikiTDO · · Score: 1

      I find this comparison a bit unfair. Now granted, I do not know much about Windows Mobile, but when it comes to the iPhone, you do not actually download a custom OS image every time you jail break. As the name implies, jail breaking keeps the existing OS, but modifies it to allow unsigned applications to be installed.

      The Android, by contrast, is inherently more open. If you so chose, you can put on a whole new boot-loader, and install your own build of the OS. Of course, distributing Google apps with an OS that has no relation to Google is wholly different from hacking an existing OS, and keeping the apps on there. Don't get me wrong, I am still annoyed at Google for pulling this stunt, but give credit where it's due.

      So, if you claim that Apple and Microsoft are more open than Google, I can only return your claim by saying Microsoft and Apple are not even in the same LEAGUE of openness. In that vein, the two cases are not even remotely comparable.

    19. Re:Do no evil? by ceoyoyo · · Score: 1

      Well, the EULA says you can't but that hasn't been tested. It's irrelevant though - they can certainly go after anybody who's modifying and then distributing the OS, anyone who exploits a security hole in the OS (a la the TIFF hack) and probably anyone who distributes tools to modify their software.

      Google is legally threatening a guy who distributes a non-Google blessed version of the OS.

    20. Re:Do no evil? by manekineko2 · · Score: 1

      Windows Mobile hacking is pretty much exactly like this case with Android. You download a custom OS image, and the custom OS images are generally based on leaked versions of the next version WinMo OS. Furthermore, they often include additional things like MS Office Mobile.

    21. Re:Do no evil? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What's even more funny is that Microsoft, a company hardly synonymous with openness, has long tolerated ROM modders doing the exact same thing on Windows Mobile.

      The difference? I think that Windows Mobile ROM modders are the only people that can get Windows Mobile to actually work. These people work with Microsoft's partners, such as Samsung, HTC, and Palm. I'm sure Microsoft will work their magic to ruin these partners, like they did with the Zune.

    22. Re:Do no evil? by TikiTDO · · Score: 1

      Hmm, maybe I should look into that then.

    23. Re:Do no evil? by Olipro · · Score: 1

      Actually, you appear to be confusing "open platform" with "open phone" The HTC manufactured Android devices aren't open in any way shape or form, all ROM updates are RSA signed, and the only way to "free" the device from these restrictions is by either exploiting something or alternatively, flashing to an old ROM that can be exploited.

    24. Re:Do no evil? by HitoGuy · · Score: 1

      I see. But what if this guy didn't use any of Google's proprietary code in it? The rest is GPL/BSD/MIT licensed, yes? They can't legally threaten them when they create a fully "free" OS?

      --
      I am beginning to think that maybe Darl McBride was attacked viciously by a penguin as a child.
    25. Re:Do no evil? by ceoyoyo · · Score: 1

      Either way. The ideal of course is to have an open network, open device and open software. As you point out, Android is open software, which is useless if you don't have a device to run it on. An open device, even paired with open software, is useless unless you've got an open network that will allow it.

      Open source software on PCs had the benefit of both open devices and (where communication was required) an open network right from the beginning.

    26. Re:Do no evil? by ceoyoyo · · Score: 1

      Yes, I believe Android itself is open source licensed (not sure which one, but it doesn't really matter for this discussion). So if Cyanogen was careful to ONLY include open code in his distribution he'd be legally okay. The question is, how easy is it to do that? Can you distribute a modified Android then have the end user add back in the Google apps later? Is it easy enough to be practical for the end user?

      The iPhone OS, of course, is entirely closed and may only be distributed by Apple.

      That's the bit that seems so ironic. Apple locks down their phone, has a bunch of rules and makes it crystal clear what the rules are. Then they don't directly go after the people who break those rules.

      Google makes a big deal about their software being open, then actually goes after an individual directly on a technicality.

  5. Le Shocque! by Rydia · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Google a giant company, not your BFF.

    Film at 11.

    1. Re:Le Shocque! by Glendale2x · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I know you're joking, but that may come as a surprise to a lot of people.

      --
      this is my sig
    2. Re:Le Shocque! by Killer+Orca · · Score: 3, Funny

      Google a giant company, not your BFF.

      That's ok, I already have Facebook as my BFF.

    3. Re:Le Shocque! by interval1066 · · Score: 4, Interesting

      I think google needs to review its own corporate philosophy again. The "Ten things we know to be true" page apparently is just a sort-of loose guide line and not a hard list of rules:
      http://www.google.com/intl/en/corporate/tenthings.html/
      Rules 1, 4 & 6 especially appear to be mere lip-service for us puny consumers to follow, not really applicable to google. I also again reiterate my belief, as mistaken it may be, that in a lot of these cases its possible that the retained corporate lawyer stable is justifying its existence by exercising corporate rights that may actually not be in the best interest of the corp.

      --
      Python: 'And then suddenly you have a language which says "we're all stuck with whatever the whiniest coder wants".'
    4. Re:Le Shocque! by CharlyFoxtrot · · Score: 1

      Yet people somehow manage to deceive themselves into thinking they'll be better about these things than Apple. At least with an Apple device you get to look trendy while being fucked over.

      --
      If all else fails, immortality can always be assured by spectacular error.
    5. Re:Le Shocque! by bennomatic · · Score: 1

      Google a giant company, not your BFF.

      Film at 11.

      So you're saying this is no BFD?

      --
      The CB App. What's your 20?
    6. Re:Le Shocque! by Glendale2x · · Score: 1

      #2 made me laugh. What don't they have their hand in these days? I miss Google when it was just a damned good search engine. Now they're trying to be the Microsoft of the internet and being mediocre at a lot of it.

      --
      this is my sig
    7. Re:Le Shocque! by Simon+(S2) · · Score: 1

      Is it just me, or does that page return a 404 now?

      --
      I just don't trust anything that bleeds for five days and doesn't die.
    8. Re:Le Shocque! by Rary · · Score: 1

      Interesting note at the bottom of the page:

      Update: We first wrote these "10 things" several years ago. From time to time we revisit this list to see if it still holds true. We hope it does — and you can hold us to that. (September 2009)

      If you think they've strayed from it, contact them and "hold them to it".

      --

      "You cannot simultaneously prevent and prepare for war." -- Albert Einstein

    9. Re:Le Shocque! by BobMcD · · Score: 1

      It's the link. Omit the last '/'.

    10. Re:Le Shocque! by BlueBlade · · Score: 1

      I know it was for comedic effect, but chock in french is actually shorter, spelled choc ;)

      --
      Religion is the best example of mass psychosis
    11. Re:Le Shocque! by jdgeorge · · Score: 1

      # 2 says "It's best to do one thing really, really well," not "it's best to do ONLY one thing." The fact is, Google still is a darn good search engine. The detail of that item explains how they see the focus on search as enabling them to add value in other, non-core, areas.

      Working link to Ten things....

    12. Re:Le Shocque! by interval1066 · · Score: 1

      Dammit. Why can't I NOT add that last slash??????

      --
      Python: 'And then suddenly you have a language which says "we're all stuck with whatever the whiniest coder wants".'
    13. Re:Le Shocque! by Jaysyn · · Score: 1

      Is that link broken or did they take that list down?

      --
      There is a war going on for your mind.
    14. Re:Le Shocque! by zapakh · · Score: 2, Insightful

      In Google's defense, they do make their opt-out process as painless as they can.

    15. Re:Le Shocque! by GooberToo · · Score: 1

      Yet people somehow manage to deceive themselves into thinking they'll be better about these things than Apple. At least with an Apple device you get to look trendy while being fucked over.

      I know...it's awesome. With an Android phone you can look trendy and NOT get fucked over. Sounds like the way to go.

    16. Re:Le Shocque! by Avalanche_Joe · · Score: 1

      Google a giant company, not your BFF.

      That's ok, I already have Facebook as my BFF.

      And Michael Moore is my Big Fat Fu--, wait; what does BFF stand for again?

    17. Re:Le Shocque! by k-macjapan · · Score: 1

      Remove the / at the end of the url and it will load.

    18. Re:Le Shocque! by chrisinspace · · Score: 1

      Google was my BFF, but I think it's time for the "it's not me, it's you" talk...

  6. In Soviet Amerika: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Android modder cease and desist Google !

    Yours In Astrakhan,
    Kilgore Trout

  7. Of course it is! by Iowan41 · · Score: 1, Troll

    Think about Google FirewallofChina, GoogleObama, GoogleCensorship and other fine Google products.

  8. It's all business by rcolbert · · Score: 0

    It seems to me that business tends to behave like business, and wants to protect their customer experiences, revenue streams, market share, etc. It's very difficult when you have a bottom line that you're accountable for, to let go of control of your product and user experience, and potentially have modified versions of your own works interrupt your revenues.

    I know this is an unpopular view, but IMO: Google !> Apple ! Microsoft

    I'm fine with business being business and customers voting with dollars. In the meantime, it would be nice for all companies, and Google in this particular instance, to realize who their friends in the opensource community are. Google certainly seems like they're guilty of friendly fire here.

  9. What is confusing? by fermion · · Score: 5, Insightful
    If Cyanogen is "passing around Google's closed-source apps like Google Maps, Google Talk and Gmail", then google has every right, even a responsibility, to stop it. It does not matter that it only runs on google authorized hardware, Cyanogen has not been given the right to distribute the software. What happens if Cyanogen, or some other person, decided to modify the Talk so that all numbers dialed were reported to third party advertisers? Not only would google lose their share of the advertising dollars, but I am sure most would hold google liable. Same thing if maps intentionally lead people to drive off a cliff. Right holders have a obligation to control distribution, and I don't trust those who don't control distribution.

    Leaving this issue aside, it does seem that Android is not the open savior that every thought it might be. Given that for a cell phone to work it must have towers, and that the towers are controlled by private enterprise in search of profit, and that large firms tend to sue each other as part of the competitive process, any completely open phone is unlikely to thrive in the marketplace. If google were no a commodity vendor, then I would say that an open phone might work. But given they want tens of millions of customers, there is going to be a compromise of open software and control.

    --
    "She's a scientist and a lesbian. She's not going to let it slide." Orphan Black
    1. Re:What is confusing? by ruin20 · · Score: 1
      If google maps lead people to drive off a cliff I would applaud them for helping eliminate people too stupid to realize that even if the map tells you to drive off a cliff that its still not a good idea. And I don't pity people who run apps from an untrusted source and get burned. I understand where you're coming from but the reason this software is being distributed is because people want the functionality. Don't send a C&D, come up with your own solution which should be that much better being it's authorized and verified with all the cozy protections from coming with the google brand attached.

      that's the real problem, cyanogen is becoming a better brand than google, and that's what they're trying to stop.

      --
      Oh honey look... How cute... an angry slashdotter!
    2. Re:What is confusing? by zero0ne · · Score: 1

      Exactly.

      this C&D is about protecting their end users.

      Developers should know better than this.

    3. Re:What is confusing? by Colonel+Korn · · Score: 1

      What happens if Cyanogen, or some other person, decided to modify the Talk so that all numbers dialed were reported to third party advertisers?

      Wouldn't Google appreciate reports of every number dialed via Talk? Or do they not count as third party?

      --
      "I zero-index my hamsters" - Willtor (147206)
    4. Re:What is confusing? by schon · · Score: 1

      What the fuck is wrong with you?

      google has every right, even a responsibility, to stop it

      They may have the right, but they have no responsibility to do it. And just because you have the right to do something, does not mean that doing it is *right*.

      What happens if Cyanogen, or some other person, decided to modify the Talk so that all numbers dialed were reported to third party advertisers?

      Is he doing that? Your argument is so fucking stupid, I'm wondering how the hell you manage to operate a computer. What if someone were to use a cyanogen modded G1 to beat a cop to death? Is that reason to stop him? What if someone used a non-cyanogen modded G1 to beat a cop to death? That might be reason to stop him too, right?

      give your head a shake

      Here's a novel concept: If he does do that, then you C&D him. Does that make sense? You know,

      And how the hell should he be held responsible if someone else does something?

      Right holders have a obligation to control distribution

      Bull fucking shit.

      If that were true, then how exactly do the Free/Open/Net BSD or FSF folks manage to survive?

      Jesus, you (and the people who modded you up) need to pull your head out of your ass - your brain is full of shit.

      (Yes, this is flamebait - mod me down, I don't care.)

    5. Re:What is confusing? by mujadaddy · · Score: 1

      Same thing if maps intentionally lead people to drive off a cliff.

      Acme Navigation: When you absolutely, positively have to get to the bottom of the cliff before the Roadrunner!

      --
      Populus vult decipi, ergo decipiatur...
      "Force shits upon Reason's back." - Poor Richard's Almanac
    6. Re:What is confusing? by TooMuchToDo · · Score: 1

      Leaving this issue aside, it does seem that Android is not the open savior that every thought it might be. Given that for a cell phone to work it must have towers, and that the towers are controlled by private enterprise in search of profit, and that large firms tend to sue each other as part of the competitive process, any completely open phone is unlikely to thrive in the marketplace. If google were no a commodity vendor, then I would say that an open phone might work. But given they want tens of millions of customers, there is going to be a compromise of open software and control.

      Cell phones don't require towers. My Blackberry from T-Mobile will tunnel calls over WiFi back to T-Mobile, so I can make free calls when out of the country, on cruise ships, wherever, as long as I have free wifi access.

      In the near future, I think you'll see most phones move to having a voice app, and they'll be physical layer agnostic (WiFi, HSDPA, whatever). Your cellular provider will just be another data provider; your device just another end point for your voice communications.

    7. Re:What is confusing? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If Cyanogen is "passing around Google's closed-source apps like Google Maps, Google Talk and Gmail", then google has every right, even a responsibility, to stop it. It does not matter that it only runs on google authorized hardware, Cyanogen has not been given the right to distribute the software. What happens if Cyanogen, or some other person, decided to modify the Talk so that all numbers dialed were reported to third party advertisers? Not only would google lose their share of the advertising dollars, but I am sure most would hold google liable. Same thing if maps intentionally lead people to drive off a cliff. Right holders have a obligation to control distribution, and I don't trust those who don't control distribution.

      Leaving this issue aside, it does seem that Android is not the open savior that every thought it might be. Given that for a cell phone to work it must have towers, and that the towers are controlled by private enterprise in search of profit, and that large firms tend to sue each other as part of the competitive process, any completely open phone is unlikely to thrive in the marketplace. If google were no a commodity vendor, then I would say that an open phone might work. But given they want tens of millions of customers, there is going to be a compromise of open software and control.

      Lets remember almost all Android modders are distributing the googles apps and the only people using them are the ones that know the risk. No one is reverse engineering the googles apps the are just keeping them in the ROM. This is not something that is sent OTA to everyone's android and updates them. This is for those who know what they are doing. Your average Joe Blow is not getting a T-Mobile Phone off the shelve with Cyanogen mod. they probably don't even know what a mod is. Yet the funniest thing about all of this

      ANYONE CAN DOWNLOAD GOOGLE MAPS, GTALK, ETC FROM THE MARKET FOR FREE.... Talk about irony

      Come on Google Whats the real reason? Your developers not as good? No thought into your process?

    8. Re:What is confusing? by Nithendil · · Score: 1

      Yah legally sure. It is just hilarious that you can "hack" a windows mobile phone (xdadevelopers) with no major outrage from MS (they did raise a stink when ROMS had 3rd party illegal software, but otherwise left it alone). Apple's iphone is so locked down you have to jailbreak it just to install anything that isn't "Apple Approved" but has pretty much left jailbreakers alone. Yet meanwhile Google, who any reasonable person considers more open than MS, goes after Cyanogen.

    9. Re:What is confusing? by smoker2 · · Score: 1

      Cell phones don't need towers, they need cruise ships.
      Neat.

    10. Re:What is confusing? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What happens if Cyanogen, or some other person, decided to modify the Talk so that all numbers dialed were reported to third party advertisers?

      I am very sure that most would hold cyanogen liable. The others are complete idiots.

      ... and I don't trust those who don't control distribution.

      What, like those guys ?

    11. Re:What is confusing? by hkmwbz · · Score: 1

      Protecting their end users? I don't need Google's protection. If I download a third party mod, it's my risk, and mine alone. Only a tiny minority will have the knowledge to install this thing anyway.

      --
      Clever signature text goes here.
  10. Simplish solution by IMarvinTPA · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Stop distributing those apps in the ROM!
    Add an app to retrieve them from the original (backup) version of the phone.

    SafeTex: Copying copyrighted textures from original Quake to custom commercial levels without incident. IE Don't distribute what's already there.

    IMarv

    1. Re:Simplish solution by X86Daddy · · Score: 1

      Doom modders had apps to do this with Doom and Doom2 as well... a WAD had to have *every* floor and ceiling tile if it had any, so modders found a way to distribute a small WAD and an app that would copy the licensed stuff at the user's machine prior to running. DEUSF was the one I used a lot.

      Likewise, Sharp Zaurus users were in a constant battle to keep / reinstall Opera and the office suite it was delivered with as we upgraded to various alternative ROMs, and some of the recommended ways to do this involved extractor programs that the user could use with the officially published Sharp ROM files.

      All that said, it's a lot clumsier for the user than just having the app / content bundled, which was free to the owner of the original program / device, and this is one of those examples of why copyright law, copyright lawyers, and the cultural phenomenon of "intellectual property" are scoffed at openly by many and in need of major overhaul. The company who sold something to the purchaser then insists the purchaser jump through hoops to use what they purchased... hoops that have no technological necessity, nor any benefit in terms of monetary exchange, etc... The technological wizards who have to change their distribution of alternative content or OSes aren't inconvenienced much... just the many paying customers. Who won what in these situations?

  11. Capitalism means crisis by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    particularly in U.S.A..

    Marx was correct.

    Yours In Samarkand,
    Philboyd Studge

  12. say what? by macbeth66 · · Score: 4, Interesting

    "not of the high Googley' caliber"

    Does anyone really believe that Google is the "do no evil" company that it used to be, pre-IPO? It has become just as suspect as any big company. The bigger problem is that people don't even see Google for what it is. It is like MS all over again.

    OK. Just my $.02 worth, I guess

    1. Re:say what? by MozeeToby · · Score: 4, Insightful

      They try, they don't always succeed, sometimes they fail miserably, but they do try. Which is better than 99% of the companies out there.

    2. Re:say what? by plastick · · Score: 1

      Does anyone really believe that Google is the "do no evil" company that it used to be, pre-IPO? It has become just as suspect as any big company. The bigger problem is that people don't even see Google for what it is. It is like MS all over again.

      Damn right, Macbeth. Well said.

    3. Re:say what? by R2.0 · · Score: 3, Informative

      "Does anyone really believe that Google is the "do no evil" company that it used to be, pre-IPO?"

      No, I don't believe that, because they never said that

      Their motto is "Don't be evil." There's a subtle, but I believe important, difference.

      --
      "As God is my witness, I thought turkeys could fly." A. Carlson
    4. Re:say what? by geekoid · · Score: 1

      How about instead of running around screaming they are bad just they are incorporated we judge them on their actions?

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    5. Re:say what? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "not of the high Googley' caliber"

      Does anyone really believe that Google is the "do no evil" company that it used to be, pre-IPO? It has become just as suspect as any big company. The bigger problem is that people don't even see Google for what it is. It is like MS all over again.

      OK. Just my $.02 worth, I guess

      Don't forget Google's purchase of Postini. It was a great product, until they killed support, fucked over the resellers (google it, heh), and have left the archiving service to become a clusterfuck of epic proportions.

      Do no evil my ass.

    6. Re:say what? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      what a miserable excuse from a fanboi. sueing someone isn't an accident or an unforeseen repercussion of another action.

      when are we going to stop winking at people who pull crap like this? we have it in politics, we have it in business and we have it in our daily lives but so many of us excuse it as a mistake.

      it's not a mistake. it was an aggressive act.

    7. Re:say what? by killthepoor187 · · Score: 1

      Exactly. They may not be the internet messiah that some people like to think that they are, but they are better than any huge corporation that I can think of. Also, I don't think that MS was ever not an evil company, I thought they started out ripping people right from the get-go with DOS. I could be wrong though.

      Either way, show me a company of Google's stature (or even close to it) that does better than they do as far as the whole "do no evil thing." With the enormous temptation it must sometimes be to manipulate markets unethically for Google's own benefit, I think they do a damn good job.

    8. Re:say what? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not since they started buying their competition in Microsoft fashion instead of competing with a better product. e.g. youtube vs video.google.com

    9. Re:say what? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      True, I think they're better than any other company whose sole business consists of mining my personal data (which I don't want them to do) and stuffing advertising in my face (which I don't want them to do).

    10. Re:say what? by R2.0 · · Score: 1

      "Not since they started buying their competition in Microsoft fashion instead of competing with a better product. e.g. youtube vs video.google.com"

      No, Microsoft fashion is to buy it and kill it so that it doesn't compete with MS's inferior product. Google bought YouTube and then effectively killed their OWN product. And they really haven't effed up YouTube. So why are they evil here?

      --
      "As God is my witness, I thought turkeys could fly." A. Carlson
    11. Re:say what? by TekJannsen · · Score: 1

      Agreed. It's important to remember that Google is still a fairly young company, about 11 years old. As time goes on and the company expands, it will continue to look and act more and more like the more traditional, established large corporations out there. The attitude of idealism and experimentation will increasingly have to compete with the concrete necessity of keeping stock holders happy and dealing with the growing number of legal issues that naturally come with expansion.

    12. Re:say what? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How did Microsoft rip people with DOS?

      Way to get the Anti MS slant in a google article...you're a pro!

    13. Re:say what? by aesiamun · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      What product has MS bought that was a competitor to their product? What did they kill, keeping the inferior product and not improving it with the tech from the new product?

    14. Re:say what? by jdgeorge · · Score: 1

      "not of the high Googley' caliber"

      Does anyone really believe that Google is the "do no evil" company that it used to be, pre-IPO? It has become just as suspect as any big company. The bigger problem is that people don't even see Google for what it is. It is like MS all over again.

      OK. Just my $.02 worth, I guess

      Does it violate the "don't be evil" idea if what Google is doing is stopping someone from violating the licensing of their software, or from illegally copying and distributing Google's closed software? If this is what's happening, I think Google hasn't done anything remotely evil in this instance.

      I suppose that if I were a Microsoft or Cyanogen executive, I might see things differently, of course. But I'm not.

    15. Re:say what? by david_thornley · · Score: 1

      Before the dark times, before the Empire...wait, where was I?

      Microsoft used to produce computer languages for small computers. Their BASIC was almost an industry standard, and they produced a lot of other useful stuff.

      While very definitely not a part of the budding hacker culture, it's hard to think of them as actually evil back then.

      --
      "When you have eliminated the unacceptable, whatever is left, however improbable, must be the truthiness" - Holmes
    16. Re:say what? by GooberToo · · Score: 1

      sueing someone isn't an accident

      What a miserable excuse of a zealot response. No one is being sued. A C&D is simply a notification you are perceived to be in violation. The letter is not legally binding. It is true, however, failure to respond to a C&D typically leads to legal action.

      Anyone can write a C&D - lawyers need not be present or even involved. To be absolutely clear, a C&D is not a legal filing of any kind, though they can be referenced in a filing.

      when are we going to stop winking at people who pull crap like this?

      What "crap" are they pulling? So far I seem to only find a misinformed and irrational rant by what appears to be an Apple zealot. Can you be more specific?

      it's not a mistake. it was an aggressive act.

      You're right, its not likely to have been a mistake but its absolutely not an "aggressive act". C&Ds are always a reactive move which squarely places them as defensive. As it actual details have not been disclosed, its not clear what it is they hope to protect but just the same, it is a defensive move.

    17. Re:say what? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They provided complete APIs for their apps and said "don't distribute our apps". This developer distributed their apps. Google again says "don't distribute our apps".

      The Microsoft answer would be "don't distribute our apps, and also now you need to pay for them, and also they are not secure and non standards-compliant and also your work signed an exclusive deal with us so you need to buy our stuff at home in case you need to do emergency work and also you can't get a job somewhere that doesn't use our stuff because everyone everywhere uses our stuff."

    18. Re:say what? by steelfood · · Score: 1

      I don't think anybody thought MS was benevolent. Beneficial, perhaps, to the personal computer market, but not benevolent. Unless you're referring to the pre-DOS days when MS was still doing BASIC interpreters.

      --
      "If a nation expects to be ignorant and free in a state of civilization, it expects what never was and never will be."
  13. Proves the point by Qubit · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Google is sending a C&D because someone is distributing closed-source Google apps (like GMail, Google Maps, etc...) without a license.

    This is why I want a phone that runs only Free Software in the base install. If I know that the base functionality is open and free, that means I can take that base set of software and modify it and distribute it to other people without worry of getting a C&D letter like this one.

    Free Software licenses are a great way to CYA. Sure, they do a number of other things for you as well, and they aren't always the best at dealing with software patents, but they CYA a lot more than most proprietary licenses I've seen.

    --

    coding is life /* the rest is */
    1. Re:Proves the point by Rydia · · Score: 1

      This is why I'm so excited for the N900. I'm sure the base install has some proprietary stuff, but given the fact that it's linux, and the amount of control you apparently have on the device through nokia's flavor (maemo), it seems to me that you really wouldn't have to worry about this kind of difficulty.

    2. Re:Proves the point by Sonic+McTails · · Score: 1

      If you have an Android Development Phone (ADP) or a rooted G1, you can wipe the stock Android install and go down to a base installation which is mostly free (the only closed bits are some drivers required for the camera, phone baseboard, and one or two other things.

      If looking at the N810 and the large amount of closed bits it has, then the resulting Android installation will be tons cleaner than the N900.

      --
      This signature was left intentionally blank.
    3. Re:Proves the point by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Maemo is roughly comparable to Android in this case. Mostly open, but a few important things are closed, and the system is pretty much useless without them.

    4. Re:Proves the point by Jaysyn · · Score: 1

      Then I guess you should get an OpenMoko.  They are relatively cheap these days.

      http://www.openmoko.com/product.html

      --
      There is a war going on for your mind.
    5. Re:Proves the point by hvidstue · · Score: 1

      Nokia is on the move too :)

  14. What Android really needs by Tumbleweed · · Score: 1

    ...is an app that disables the Android kill switch.

    FREEDOM!

    1. Re:What Android really needs by selven · · Score: 1

      The kill switch only applies to the android market (not the PERFECTLY LEGIT alternate markets) for apps that violate its terms of service.

    2. Re:What Android really needs by Tumbleweed · · Score: 1

      The kill switch only applies to the android market (not the PERFECTLY LEGIT alternate markets) for apps that violate its terms of service.

      What about when those same apps are available from the other markets?

    3. Re:What Android really needs by dangitman · · Score: 1

      ...is an app that disables the Android kill switch.

      That sounds pretty dangerous to me. When my androids go bezerk, I want to know there is a kill switch available.

      FREEDOM!

      Sure, for our new robotic overlords, but what about us puny humans?

      --
      ... and then they built the supercollider.
  15. Heres my 2 cents by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Informative

    Cyanogen has been modding for awhile without any trouble from Google. Recently he released a rom that was basically android 1.6 in full, including the new improved version of android market, way before the rest of android users will get it. I think thats what Google is mostly bent out of shape about, hopefully they can reach some sort of peaceful agreement that allows cyanogen to keep modding. His roms are great and make the g1 a powerful device.

    1. Re:Heres my 2 cents by fifewiskey · · Score: 0

      Or could they be bent out of shape because the competition between them, MS, and Apple is heating up. At some point, if Google wants to "ball" with the big boys in their arena they might have to start playing the same game as them. I personally enjoy Google the way they have always been but it will probably come to the point that Google can no longer survive on just the community and googliness alone.

  16. Lawyers against dev community == bad idea by dwight_hubbard · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Bottom line most developers are going to care less about why google is sending lawyers after their community than the fact that they may have to deal with that crap if they develop for Android. Since there are groups producing similar mods to Windows Mobile firmwre, this Cease and Desist has the potential to make the open source mod community around android less vibrant than the community around the Microsoft's closed source OS. Which is a real shame.

    If Google doesn't do some rapid damage control they're liable to find their development community moving over to other Open Source phone OSes that don't send lawyers after their development community.

    1. Re:Lawyers against dev community == bad idea by rliden · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Developers should care about why Google is doing this. How would you feel if people were distributing your apps or project without a license possibly in violation of that license? It's irresponsible of those developers not to abide by the licensing agreements. If these developers were distributing GPL apps without a license I'm pretty sure the FSF would be breathing down their necks too. It's a matter of respect and professionalism. Those developers are out of line.

      --
      Don't think of it as a flame, more like an argument that does 3d6 fire damage.
    2. Re:Lawyers against dev community == bad idea by Mascot · · Score: 2, Informative

      This has nothing to do with developing for Android. It has to do with illegally distributing somebody else's software for the Android.

      Any developer too dim to realize the difference between those two, I don't think I'd want any software from anyways.

    3. Re:Lawyers against dev community == bad idea by Andy+Dodd · · Score: 1

      It's strange. It really is starting to look like every major mobile phone platform based on Linux (OpenMoko is small-fry and still doesn't really have anything but developer toys, and Nokia's Maemo-based devices are almost entirely non-phone.) is at the closed end of the spectrum for modders/developers due to rampant Tivoization. It's a pretty big contrast compared to the Windows Mobile community, where to my knowledge, Microsoft and HTC have never C&Ded xda-developers, and I've heard rumors that there is some unofficial support from inside those companies at this point.

      It's really sad when the most open and flexible platform in a particular market segment (mobile phones) is a Microsoft product.

      --
      retrorocket.o not found, launch anyway?
    4. Re:Lawyers against dev community == bad idea by Andy+Dodd · · Score: 1

      OK, a bit more clarification:

      http://duttythroy.net/component/content/article/35-romnews/172-microsoft-and-htc-say-ok-to-xda-developers.html

      No support, but an statement of no plans to C&D the developers.

      (translation: What the developers are doing is good for business and the manufacturers are being smart about it.)

      --
      retrorocket.o not found, launch anyway?
    5. Re:Lawyers against dev community == bad idea by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >If Google doesn't do some rapid damage control they're liable to find their development community moving over to other Open Source phone OSes that don't send lawyers after their development community.

      Such as?

    6. Re:Lawyers against dev community == bad idea by jopsen · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Sure, developers should care... And Google probably has the law on its side..
      But maybe Google should work this out instead of sending a C&D...

      It seams to me as Google is trying to control how their apps are experienced kind of like Apple does it... And that doesn't really encourage community participation...

      Anyway, I guess that settles it for me... I'm not buying an Android phone anytime soon... :)

    7. Re:Lawyers against dev community == bad idea by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I have to agree. That's why my phone is a Windows Mobile phone.

    8. Re:Lawyers against dev community == bad idea by dwight_hubbard · · Score: 1

      Sure they needed to enforce their copyright, but they didn't have to send their flying monkey lawyer minions after a high profile community developer.

      They could have worked with the developer community on a workable compromise that wouldn't interfere with the mod-rom community but would allow users to use their existing licensed software.

      The real issue is they didn't try to work with the community for a win-win solution instead they did the evil thing and went for a solution that benefits google to the detriment of their users and developers.

    9. Re:Lawyers against dev community == bad idea by rliden · · Score: 1

      I think it's a bit of a stretch, if not disingenuous, to say that this illustrates Google imposing draconian control over app development in the same way Apple is accused. They are definitely encouraging community development just not with regards to illegally distributing their own apps. They are discouraging people from distributing their software without a license. I don't see how you could confuse the two. Do you want your software distributed without a licenses? Do you want your clsoed proprietary software code distributed without your permission? Do you want your GPL code modified and used, possibly in a closed app, without a license and without the code being available?

      This really has nothing to do with promoting or discouraging development on their platform, although I'm sure those that don't like this will spin it that direction. This is, like I said in my parent post, about professionalism, respect, and proper procedures.

      --
      Don't think of it as a flame, more like an argument that does 3d6 fire damage.
    10. Re:Lawyers against dev community == bad idea by rliden · · Score: 1

      I think it was the developers responsibility to ensure they were in compliance with licensing. Google sent them legal notice to stop distributing their applications. If the developer(s) want to continue to distribute Google apps then they need to strike a deal with Google.

      How is what they did evil? Is anyone directly harmed? How does this benefit Google but not the end user? Can't users easily get Google Apps without this app?

      --
      Don't think of it as a flame, more like an argument that does 3d6 fire damage.
    11. Re:Lawyers against dev community == bad idea by GooberToo · · Score: 1

      You didn't RTFA or even attempt to understand the summary, did you? Google is NOT sending lawyers after developers. Basically everything in your post is misleading or inaccurate. As a result, your presentation of impending doom is completely baseless to the point of being laughable.

      I just wish the moderators will realize your post is troll, overrated, flamebait, or even funny, but it absolutely is not insightful, interesting, or informative, by any measure.

  17. Are they actually modified? by JSBiff · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Seems to me that the most reasonable compromise, for all involved, is for Google to allow redistribution without modification of their closed source software. Yes, Google has the legal right to make cyanogen stop distributing, but how does that benefit Google? Lots of 'proprietary' software are distributed as .zip or .exe files which the license allows you to make verbatim copies of. This is slightly different, because the software is incorporated as part of a ROM image, but as long as the software inside the ROM image isn't modified, Google should just let him distribute. He's not hurting them in any real way.

    1. Re:Are they actually modified? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The problem is that these apps are partly used as leverage to encourage mobile manufacturers to work with Google rather than entirely go off and do their own thing, like breaking compatibility. The Market apps is the same (also closed source). It's one of those fine balancing acts that is required when trying to make a huge, open source operating system that actually gets useful amounts of deployment whilst staying compatible and having a meaningful brand.

    2. Re:Are they actually modified? by Rhaban · · Score: 1

      The problem is, google's closed softwares won't always be distributed with the phones.
      A phone provider can choose to distribute an android phone with only their own apps, without the ones from google.
      If the same phone is distributed in another country with the apps, and someone make a new rom with the apps, it allows someone to install the app on a phone where it wasn't meant to be installed.

      And this is bad for google business with phone profiders.

    3. Re:Are they actually modified? by nacturation · · Score: 1

      Google might be using third party technology which Google is unable to license to others to redistribute. By not enforcing this, they may lose the ability to continue to use it themselves and would have to remove these apps permanently from the market.

      Of course, all that's based on assumptions like every other post here.

      --
      Want to improve your Karma? Instead of "Post Anonymously", try the "Post Humously" option.
    4. Re:Are they actually modified? by smartr · · Score: 1

      I can't wait for the next Google crapware bundle to come out. If they're not open sourcing them, I fail to see why they would allow this kind of thing without giving specific exceptions.

    5. Re:Are they actually modified? by JSBiff · · Score: 1

      "If they're not open sourcing them, I fail to see why they would allow this kind of thing without giving specific exceptions."

      Well, because, they are, I believe, basically distributed 'by default' with Android, so users expect them to be present. The underlying OS is Open Source. So, now, as an Open Source developer, Cyanogen can mod the operating system (as is his right, per the license for Android), but because he can't distribute the proprietary parts from Google, if any users try to get the "benefits" of Open Source by downloading the modified Android, they lose the Google Apps.

      I suppose another way Google could address this satisfactorily would be to allow the end-users to download the Google Apps to their phone again after installing the modified version of Android.

      But, an "Open Source" platform, which you can't redistribute core parts of, really fails to be usefully "Open". Yes, I'd think it'd be great if Google went the next step and Open Sourced the apps, but if they're not going to do that, at least let Open Source devs redistribute the unmodified binaries to their end users (or, as I said, let them download them again).

  18. Google forgot its tagline/motto by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Don't be evil.

  19. not smart by poetmatt · · Score: 1

    there are tons of modder communities within the G1. To do this is not only a: a bad call, and b: bad for publicity neglects the fact that cyanogen can easily leak the info to others (and people can easily continue with cyanogen's work thanks to the apache license).

  20. Workaround : bring patch+script instead of ROM by testman123 · · Score: 1

    I suggest to Cyanogen that he releases a "patch" and a script instead of a ROM. Doing so, it would people people resposability to get their own rom and "patch" them using the given script to produce a patched ROM :)

    My question on Android is : how can google not release it under GPL as they are using a linux kernel ?

    Another point I see, is where are the specifications of Android ? Open ... but without public spec is a bit strange. As google says, no Android is not a Java compatible platform at this time. If you don't have any standard to stick with. How are you sure your current application will work in a comming new version ?

    Google realy needs to clarify its position about Android licence, strategy and relation with Java or it will damage the product aura.

    1. Re:Workaround : bring patch+script instead of ROM by Ren+Hoak · · Score: 1

      My question on Android is : how can google not release it under GPL as they are using a linux kernel ?

      The parts of their system that are linked against other GPL modules -are- GPL. There are other parts (such as Google Maps, etc.) which are not. GPL is not the virus M$ would have you believe it is; it's very easy to create a system that has plenty of GPL along side plenty of other licenses, all coexisting peacefully.

  21. Maemo opportunity?? by dwight_hubbard · · Score: 1

    This begs the question, could a functional Maemo rom be made for the G1 as an alternative to Cyanogen??

  22. They were doing it the wrong way by Vexorian · · Score: 3, Insightful

    It is illegal to distribute closed source apps without the license. It doesn't matter if you think what you are doing is not for profit or doing any 'harm'. Google is even required by law to enforce its copyright. The answer is not to complain about google doing evil or about how it is 'harmless' to use this software illegally but to make free software clones of the apps and avoid the legal non-sense altogether. And in most cases, you don't even need to make them... they are already done.

    This is something that must be understood. Some "alternative" GNU/Linux distros out there love to include things like Skype and flash without any license. It is illegal doing so, and the reason most of the major distros don't do it. (Some of them don't do it because they don't like proprietary software, but most of them really do it just to avoid the copyright infrigement).

    --

    Copyright infringement is "piracy" in the same way DRM is "consumer rape"
    1. Re:They were doing it the wrong way by melikamp · · Score: 1

      It is illegal to distribute closed source apps without the license.

      Not true in general.

      Google is even required by law to enforce its copyright.

      Simply incorrect. You may be thinking about trademarks, and even then it's not phrased very well.

      Some "alternative" GNU/Linux distros out there love to include things like Skype and flash without any license.

      Name one.

    2. Re:They were doing it the wrong way by alexosaki · · Score: 1

      It's curious that even though you think "Google is even required by law to enforce its copyright" Microsoft somehow manages to let it go in regards to developers for the WinMo platform. Maybe when you're big enough, you can just ignore the things you're "required by law" to do? Or maybe they realise that when you have a completely rubbish mobile operating system (Android, WinMo) encouraging development for it is more important than getting bent out of shape about what you have the right to do? Either way, regardless of what Google *can* do, what they *have* done is incomprehensibly shortsighted. Perhaps the new telcos signing on to Android (the poor bastards) have forced Google's hand, but it's still intensely bad PR. It's like me going after a kid's lemonade stand because they don't have a license or haven't been inspected by the FDA or whatever. Regardless of how high and mighty I can be about your authority to do so, or how legal it is, it has no potential to make me look like anything other than a spanner and every potential to backfire hideously. Of course, given the geek attention span of "until the next shiny object" I predict the outrage in the Android community to taper off within a week, which is what Google wants and expects. I do think that come time to re-enlist (my contract with TMo is up in January) there will be more than a few people dropping the platform (what with it being complete rubbish and no credible alternative now existing)

    3. Re:They were doing it the wrong way by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It is illegal to distribute closed source apps without the license. It doesn't matter if you think what you are doing is not for profit or doing any 'harm'. Google is even required by law to enforce its copyright.

      It is not neccesary to enforce copyright. Unlike trademark law, copyright does not get diluted in any legal sense.

    4. Re:They were doing it the wrong way by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Google is even required by law to enforce its copyright."

      I know this is true, but can you explain this more.

  23. Similar thing happens with Windows Mobile by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Lots of people mod Windows Mobile, posting ROMs full of copyrighted material. Microsoft would be well within their rights to start suing them. As far as I know, they haven't.

    The law is on the side of Google and Microsoft in this case... But... To be completely honest, as long as these modders are not doing so for commercial gain, I have a hard time sympathizing with the corporations.

    Smart phones today are held hostage by their carriers and manufacturers. I've paid the manufacturer and the OS vendor for this thing, but my device is not living up to its full potential out of the box. Who do I rely on to fix this? HTC? AT&T or T-Mobile? Fat chance. Yet these companies are the ones authorized to release new firmware, and they have little economic incentive to make the changes I want. Chances are I have to use a hacked ROM to suit my needs.

    In many cases the OS vendor isn't necessarily to blame. If Google or Microsoft or whoever could license me, an individual, an OS update for some fee, I'd pay them. If the market for smart phone software were set up more like a PC, I think either of those companies might do that. Unfortunately, based on what I've heard from people who work in this business, the carrier is the one with ultimate authority, and letting consumers do what they want is against their interests.

  24. A few details by rickb928 · · Score: 4, Informative

    From TMONews:

    "20:03] google just cease and desisted me
    [20:15] cyanogenmod is probably going to be dead
    [20:16] i'm opening a dialogue with them
    [20:20] no they are talking specifically about the closed-source google apps
    [20:20] and how i am not licensed to distribute them
    [20:20] my argument is that i only develop for google-experience devices which are already licensed for these apps
    [20:20] so we'll see what they say
    [20:20] maybe we can work something out
    [20:24] maps, market, talk, gmail, youtube"20:03] google just cease and desisted me
    [20:15] cyanogenmod is probably going to be dead
    [20:16] i'm opening a dialogue with them
    [20:20] no they are talking specifically about the closed-source google apps
    [20:20] and how i am not licensed to distribute them
    [20:20] my argument is that i only develop for google-experience devices which are already licensed for these apps
    [20:20] so we'll see what they say
    [20:20] maybe we can work something out
    [20:24] maps, market, talk, gmail, youtube"

    Probably he will have to drop those apps. This will make loading Cyanogen a little more difficult. Next, will Google prevent him from using those apps to test his distro, or will they make it impossible to run them under his ROMs?

    Somehow, this is beginning to look like the end of Google the Nice. The beginning of the open Google the Evil.

    Kinda sad, but now that Android is important, the game changes.

    --
    deleting the extra space after periods so i can stay relevant, yeah.
    1. Re:A few details by rawdirt · · Score: 1

      you forgot androidandme.com is slashdotte ;)

    2. Re:A few details by dangitman · · Score: 1

      Did he just get stuck in a loop? Kids, this is why you don't use GOTO!

      --
      ... and then they built the supercollider.
    3. Re:A few details by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You can't just drop all closed source apps from Android. I'm not sure it would even compile or run properly, let alone be usable.

    4. Re:A few details by chrisinspace · · Score: 1

      The problem I see is in the timing. Android isn't all that important right now, but it's just on the cusp of being so. There are close to a dozen new Android phones slated for Q3 and Q4 release and there has been talk of Android on some netbooks (but with the ChromeOS announcement, who knows what's going on there). The reason I ditched my Blackberry and bought an Android phone was because I wanted a device that is based on open standards. This would inevitably create a vibrant developer/modder community and make Android a very powerful platform. Things were definitely trending that way, but for Google to slam the brakes on that just as it was gaining momentum is a bad move. Now I'm locked into a contract so I'll be following this problem closely for a while, but I'm also going to start paying a lot more attention to Moblin. This definitely changes my view of Google, whose services I use extensively (GMail, Google Voice, Google Docs, etc). If their corporate philosophy is going to start evolving into "Microsoft, the Sequel", I'm going to start looking for alternatives.

  25. C&D begets opensource by anonymousNR · · Score: 1

    if Google pisses-off a good developer group, then its possible that they will turn to developing an open source alternative. More good for open source.

    --
    -- It is the mark of an educated mind to be able to entertain a thought without accepting it. -- Aristotle
  26. Solution by geirt · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Google, please hire Cyanogen. He is clever!

    --

    RFC1925
  27. Open Source my ass! by Hurricane78 · · Score: 1, Funny

    Android never was open source. It did just look like it would be, to trick some into it, who you will see below, defending more the respect for their decisions than Android. ;)

    And now Google shows its real face, regarding this.

    Now I'm happy I didn't jump on that train, and chose Symbian (although still pretty crappy) as the main platform.

    P.S.: Don't ask a free-thinking developer about the iPhone, if you wanna keep your head. ;)

    --
    Any sufficiently advanced intelligence is indistinguishable from stupidity.
    1. Re:Open Source my ass! by geekoid · · Score: 0

      Your an idiot. I wish people like you would leave /.

      A) Android is Open Source.

      B) This isn't about Android

      C) This is about specific apps on android.

      D) Are you really this stupid, or are you just being stupid to justify your poor decision i.e. Symbian.

      RTFA

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    2. Re:Open Source my ass! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think you're the stupid one for taking his comment seriously.

    3. Re:Open Source my ass! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Your an idiot.

      Irony, thy name is geekoid!

  28. So close... by Qubit · · Score: 2, Interesting

    This is why I'm so excited for the N900. I'm sure the base install has some proprietary stuff, but...

    Bingo!

    I think that the n900 is going to have the same issue as we have with Android phones and the Pam Pre: There's proprietary software in the base install.

    If the only proprietary software on the device is games or some non-essential application, then that's not going to be a problem. Someone can just make a replacement image for the device with those non-free apps removed. But if bits of the OS or base applications like SMS, calendaring, email, etc... are under a proprietary license, that might be a big block to using the phone with only Free Software.

    I'm hopeful about the n900, but I'm not holding my breath.

    --

    coding is life /* the rest is */
    1. Re:So close... by benthurston27 · · Score: 1

      from what I've read it is some of the widgets like screen brightness or battery life etc that are proprietary. It might be difficult to remove the proprietary parts.

  29. So don't distribute those apps... by argent · · Score: 3, Informative

    This isn't any different from the Second Life client where third party packagers have to leave out certain closed-source components that Linden Lab uses. When you use them, you take the SL client downloaded from Linden Lab, and add the updated open source components. Most open source clients include an installer now that copies the closed source components from your original SL directory into the new application.

  30. Cyanogenmod wikipedia article similarly cut down.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Coincidental to the cease and desist from Google, the cyanogenmod wikipedia article was pulled following two requests for deletion (RfDs).

    The first RfD was submitted with the following rationale:

    "It's not like this is the iPhone. It's just yet another Apple ripoff like Windows and Linux."

    It didn't last long. The second RfD was made on the basis of insufficient "significant" 2nd-party references despite numerous examples of such references and despite the fact that many similar firmware distributions with articles on Wikipedia do not provide ANY significant 2nd-party citations whatsoever. The admin Juliancolton completely overruled the clear consensus of the participants (who are accused of "canvassing"):

    The result was delete. This is a textbook case of WP:NOTAVOTE. Naturally, I all but discounted the votes from SPAs that were clearly canvassed via off-wiki forums. The arguments provided by these users are almost entirely non-existent or exceptionally weak in nature, especially those that do nothing but accuse others of "deletionism". That said, there are some valid keep votes, but these aren't very persuasive, either. Many could be classified as WP:ITSNOTABLE, where there is no explanation as to why the subject is notable, but rather a hollow claim that it is. The arguments for deletion, on the other hand, a well-thought out and backed up by relevant policies and guidelines. I can therefore conclude that consensus is on the side of deletion in this discussion. Just as a note, I did close the previous discussion, but only from a procedural point of view; therefore I believe I am neutral enough to review this AfD. -Juliancolton | Talk 14:36, 25 September 2009 (UTC)

    And of course, the admin pulls the article for insufficient coverage on the day CyanogenMod gets more mainstream coverage than it ever has before.

  31. Openness by Estragib · · Score: 2, Interesting

    its more open when developers have choices.

    All the user cares about is data.

    This just isn't true. I have to invest quite some time to familiarize myself with an application and set my preferences, expecting to be able to use it in the future. With closed software, I never know if can do just that. A closed application may change in a way that makes new versions unusable for me at any time. What's worse, closed source locks me in, forcing me to eat all the little nuisances they decide to inflict upon me.

    It might be a decision to abandon certain functionality (not supporting a certain file format any longer, or dropping a lesser used feature to concentrate on a more popular one), it might be a matter of trust (changes in license or privacy agreement; a BitTorrent client getting sold to a company connected to copyright holders or an email client to a company known for data mining), it might be a matter of price (formerly free applications going commercial), it might just be the ever-so-popular dumbing down of the user interface.

    My problem is that I can't just stop updating it now, because I depend on bug fixes. In the worst case I need security fixes to keep my system safe at all.

    With FOSS-software I would fork from the version that has the functionality I need, trust or can use efficiently, and just keep up with any holes as they appear. I can't do any of that with closed software, effectively barring me from using the app any longer and wasting the time I invested in the application in the first place.

    A prominent example of this is uTorrent. When they were sold, a lot of people, me included, would have liked to keep current functionality (it was fairly sufficient). To keep using the old version, though, is to keep any security holes that were discovered in the meantime wide open. I'm sure other people remember a lot of other examples.

    I even wondered about this when I started using uTorrent but decided, nah, that guy seems ok, I think I can risk it. I don't think I will make that mistake again. I like to be in control of my applications, not the other way around.

    1. Re:Openness by FlyingBishop · · Score: 1

      In the short term, sure. But in the long term, you're fine, because BitTorrent was originally engineered as a closed-source application with an open protocol. There are a variety of clients, and you only have interface issues. Yes, I prefer open source, but I think uTorrent is a good example of precisely why it's data communication that's important and not the software doing it.

      That said, have you found a good uTorrent replacement? I'm still looking. At the moment I just use transmission, which is suboptimal.

    2. Re:Openness by jeremyp · · Score: 1

      This just isn't true. I have to invest quite some time to familiarize myself with an application and set my preferences, expecting to be able to use it in the future. With closed software, I never know if can do just that. A closed application may change in a way that makes new versions unusable for me at any time. What's worse, closed source locks me in, forcing me to eat all the little nuisances they decide to inflict upon me.

      For the vast majority of users i.e. those who can't write code, open source software has exactly the same problems.

      With FOSS-software I would fork from the version that has the functionality I need, trust or can use efficiently, and just keep up with any holes as they appear.

      You can, yes. But can a salesman? A secretary? My aged mother? No.

      --
      All I want is a secure system where it's easy to do anything I want. Is that too much to ask ~~ Randall Munroe
    3. Re:Openness by Estragib · · Score: 1

      My requirements were prioritizing, selective downloading, FOSS, a small footprint, and running as service/daemon, and I tried most of the clients on the Wikipedia list that fit these criteria. I liked Deluge most, though I still had a a few problems.

      In the end, the problem solved itself when I did the switch from Windows to Linux as my main OS. I use rTorrent, daemonized in screen now and have never looked back. It's very small and has console and (optional) web interfaces.

      Oh, and please don't tell anyone I said "FOSS-software".

  32. Re:Cyanogenmod wikipedia article similarly cut dow by RPoet · · Score: 1

    There was no "clear consensus"; most of the people commenting were new or low-volume users who could not argue for keeping the article ("it's good information" is not sufficient for a Wikipedia article to exist). The AfDs were clearly off-site campaigns. I've been around Wikipedia AfDs enough to see that this is no conspiracy.

    If you can't establish notability, it's not notable, as easy as that. Saying that other stuff exists is specifically not an argument against deletion.

    --
    "Oppression and harassment is a small price to pay to live in the land of the free." -- Montgomery Burns.
  33. zOMG,, Teh Googel Is Teh Dunt Be Teh EVEL!!!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Teh Googel is teh dunt be teh evel, evry1 nos dis.

    Dey rnt teh MiKKKr0$$$l0th, WHO BE TEH EVEL!!!!11!!!!11onehundredeleventhousandonehundredeleven

    Soze stp cretitzizing teh Googel, mkay?

    1. Re:zOMG,, Teh Googel Is Teh Dunt Be Teh EVEL!!!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You are not clever.

  34. "Barney Google, with the Goo-goo-googley eyes" by garyebickford · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Hmm. The earlier poster who mentioned whether this was a 'Googley' reaction reminded me suddenly. One of the very first million-selling songs (sheet music) was a song written by Billy Rose in the 1920's, called "Barney Google, with the Goo-goo-googly eyes" , inspired by the Barney Google comic strip. (I thought it was the other way round, but never mind.)

    This raises an interesting question - is Google's name in violation of the trademark of the Barney Google / Snuffy Smith comic strip, or the song?

    According to the afore-mentioned Wikipedia article, there is arguably an indirect connection (through the mathematical googol) between the two Googles - if nothing else it's an interesting case of a word's spelling tending to gravitate toward a common predictable form - or something.

    Hmmm.

    --
    It's easier to be a result of the past, but more fun to be a cause of the future! http://www.spacefinancegroup.com/
    1. Re:"Barney Google, with the Goo-goo-googley eyes" by ubernostrum · · Score: 1

      This raises an interesting question - is Google's name in violation of the trademark of the Barney Google / Snuffy Smith comic strip, or the song?

      It's actually not interesting, and no. Trademarks apply to a specific field of endeavor, which means that two companies, products or services in unrelated industries can (and often do) have the same name and both can hold trademarks on it (for example, there's a computer manufacturer named "Dell", and also a book/magazine publisher named "Dell").

    2. Re:"Barney Google, with the Goo-goo-googley eyes" by BobMcD · · Score: 1

      On what grounds would this not be interesting to someone who hadn't considered that angle of the discussion?

    3. Re:"Barney Google, with the Goo-goo-googley eyes" by geekoid · · Score: 1

      Did Barney Google have a search engine?

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
  35. Learn the lesson now by al0ha · · Score: 1

    All companies started by techs with a visionary idea eventually turn into just another money grubbing entity run solely for the benefit of Goldman Sachs.

    --
    Did you ever wake up in the morning, with a Zombie Woof behind your eyes? -- FZ
    1. Re:Learn the lesson now by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Shhh, all the Google fanboys here want to believe that Google is different. Don't ruin their fantasy, you insensitive clod!

  36. This is a serious problem by hidden · · Score: 4, Informative

    At least on the Rogers Dream (Canadian version of the G1) Cyanogen and similar are the ONLY way to run the phone well..

    With the stock firmware timestamps are broken (as in text messages showing up in the wrong time zone, making the sorting of a conversation all wrong) and Performance is miserable.
    By contrast Cyanogenmod more than solves these problems, transforming it from a badly flawed phone that makes Android look really BAD, to an excellent that makes android look great.
    I'm not exaggerating when I say that, given what a poor job rogers has done resolving serious bugs like the timestamp one, I would never buy another android phone from Rogers, if I were going to be stuck using the stock firmware. However, as long as the modder community remains in play, I am a happy user who would be happy to buy a new device that came out.

    I guess my point is, if google starts to shutdown the modders, they really are actually pushing customers (well, at least one) away.

  37. Cyanogen builds without the Google Apps by azdio · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I welcome versions of Cyanogen without the google applications.

    1. Re:Cyanogen builds without the Google Apps by idontgno · · Score: 1

      Gosh, get it right.

      "I, for one, welcome our new Cyanogen without the Google applications overlords."

      --
      Welcome to the Panopticon. Used to be a prison, now it's your home.
  38. Dear Dittohead: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You obviously never read any Marx.

  39. im very curious what it means for... by pjr.cc · · Score: 1

    The tytn2 and the HTC Hero android hacks.

    I was VERY VERY keen to get a Hero (still am), but its complicated by the fact that the Hero available (UK) has one band missing that's used in Australia (though not by my mobile provider). Work is currently renegotiating its contracts for phones and so until they do (and either stay with the same provider or switch to the provider that uses the band) I really dont know what to do. Im keen as mustard to get one.

    However, in the interum i've found solace in the fact that people have hacked android to run on the tytn2 and lately, hacked the Hero firmware to work on it. This is great for me cause it gives me a feel of whether I want the phone or not, and I still do.

    Curious that Google would chase someone that way really, its not the typical google way and perhaps its the beginning of google turning evil? or maybe they're being forced to do it from one of their licensee's? Will be interesting to see how this turns out.

    But, there seems to be one simple way around it. Rather then distributing a ROM, distribute a build tool. Something that sucks a rom off the owners phone, does the cynogen mods and creates a new rom for the user to upload... Would this ont solve the problem?

  40. Google is evil by Snaller · · Score: 2, Insightful

    "Case closed."

    Indeed. They are evil.

    --
    If Google really cared they would fix Android Chrome to reflow text, instead of discriminating
  41. Arent all those apps in the market place? by new2_60605 · · Score: 0

    Couldn't the cyanogen package be made without those apps then simply download those apps from the market place later? its pain ni the ass but its still better than the garbage Google sends out on its un modified firmware. If the modding for the Android stops Google will successfully kill its launch into the mobile phone market. People wanted an open alternative to iPhone. I even put of with the incredible amount of glitchyness that comes with the G1 just so I dont have to be locked down to closed platforms like Darwin with Cocoa on the iPhone. If I have to be locked down.. then apple has the better phone. its not like HTC is the only one making money from the sales of the hardware, Google gets paid when they sell the phone whether you use their software or not like when you buy a computer with windows and wipe it to install linux, microshit still gets paid for the license... why cut off the revenue stream by giving the consumers a reason not to purchase in the first place? HTC will still sell phones it will just have Windows Mobile on it instead. Google is only hurting them selves. Besides with Apple kicking the google voice app out the only way google is going to make money from that service is to have a stable foot hold on the marketplace, by cutting off a source of distribution they are in turn shooting them selves in the foot. Again.. Google is only hurting them selves. With t-moblie changing their overage rates recently a lot of customers are eligible to be released from their contract under the condition that t-mobile unilaterally changed the terms of service under US Commercial Codes the original contract is no longer enforceable. So now we have the option to sell our Unlocked G1's for twice what we paid for them by signing a contract and take that money to another service provider like Verizon or AT&T. Simply put if google kills the best of the modders, they kill any future revenue stream from users like me. I still have my unlocked iPhone all i have to do is put the SIM chip back in. Goodbye Google Market Hello Apple App Store. No but seriously leave the modders alone i hate that i have to use itunes for my iPhone but not more than i hate a glitchy G1 that i cant do anything about.

    1. Re:Arent all those apps in the market place? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And where are we supposed to get the market itself? This is one of the closed source apps in question.

      The setup wizard itself would also have to be removed. Say bye-bye to syncing your contacts and calendars!

      This motion makes ALL Android home-cooked ROMs handicapped.

  42. It's because of the Market app by Orange+Crush · · Score: 4, Insightful

    His latest ROM has the new market app which isn't only closed-source, but it's unreleased closed source. Google doesn't want their stuff going into the wild until they say so.

    1. Re:It's because of the Market app by bill_mcgonigle · · Score: 1

      way to poke the bull in the eyes there - so he's not just violating license, he's probably causing back-end problems too. That was dumb.

      --
      My God, it's Full of Source!
      OUTSIDE_IP=$(dig +short my.ip @outsideip.net)
    2. Re:It's because of the Market app by stephanruby · · Score: 1

      way to poke the bull in the eyes there - so he's not just violating license, he's probably causing back-end problems too. That was dumb.

      If he's causing back-end problem, you don't have a lawyer send him a C&D, you have an engineer give him a call. Google has all the phone numbers of the developers who develop on their platform. Many times, a friendly phone call will work a thousand times better than sending a threatening letter.

    3. Re:It's because of the Market app by bill_mcgonigle · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Yeah, you're absolutely right. I don't know what Google is like, but there are some tech companies where the lawyers are itchin' to sue everybody in sight and they get held back by more reasoned heads until some line is crossed. IP problems vs. operational problems could be such a line - given how engineer-heavy Google is, I can see a culture that would have decided that trust among engineers was lost with the decision to distribute a private beta of a client/server app. Since Google isn't want to sue everybody in sight, my speculation is that something like this was going on. Or maybe this will define a bright line in their descent into Evil - we'll see.

      --
      My God, it's Full of Source!
      OUTSIDE_IP=$(dig +short my.ip @outsideip.net)
  43. Trademark protection is to avoid confusion by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The intent of trademark protection is to avoid confusion. In this case, the modder isn't producing something and calling it Gmail and Google. He is repackaging Gmail and Google in his modded image. There may be an argument that some users may confuse the modded image with an officially supported image, but I find that unlikely.

  44. Re:Cyanogenmod wikipedia article similarly cut dow by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The fact that Wikipedia policy exists to justify such action does not mean the policy or action is in any way good.

  45. Google gave Apple an argument for the FCC by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The app market does not include some of these google applications (i.e. Gmail, Google Talk) so if they are not distributed with the modified rom the user will end up with a significantly inferior phone, practically defeating the reason for an alternate rom (and google can close the few remaining workaroud to get these apps).

    So legal issues aside, it appears that Google is trying to control the market and the user experience in the very same way Apple does.

    This opens the door for for Apple to go back to the FCC and say that they are not controlling the iPhone market more than Google does the Android app market. Google may have been penny wise and pound foolish. They thought they shot Cyanogen, buy may have shot themselves in the foot.

  46. Re:Cyanogenmod wikipedia article similarly cut dow by RPoet · · Score: 1

    Of course not. You can challenge the policy all you want, and if you don't succeed, you can take the whole damn Wikipedia database and start a competitor.

    I, for one, agree with Wikipedia policies. Wikipedia is an encyclopedia, and that requires a certain amount of notability and a certain amount of verifiability.

    --
    "Oppression and harassment is a small price to pay to live in the land of the free." -- Montgomery Burns.
  47. could he just take those apps out? by Nyder · · Score: 1

    I have a G1, and I don't run his rom.

    But it seems to me that he should be able to take those out, and then make a program that could add them however.

    I've been considering rooting my phone, mainly since I heard that they weren't updating my phone with new android releases.
    Now if googles getting all butthurt over this stuff, then maybe I should.

    I'd remove those apps from the release of his rom, and then see what they say. Seems if they wanted to talk they would of gotten a hold of him first though, unless doing polite business went out last thursday.

    --
    Be seeing you...
  48. Maemo != Free/Open Source by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Maemo itself is built around a closed source core.

    See the comments section here for some of the gory details and the sad response from Quim Gil (Nokia employee who promised to make Maemo more open when he started his job...).

    Primarily, this prevents non-Nokia firmware from running properly on the Nokia internet tablets and judging from past releases also on future Maemo powered Nokia phones. However, it has also resulted in open source folks avoiding anything Maemo if by any means possible (those that don't receive a paycheck from Nokia anyway). See Mickey's (of Opie, OpenEmbbedded and OpenMoko fame) comment for an example.

    If that wasn't enough, Maemo is, technically, also best described as one giant clusterfuck. With the upcoming release they've made sure it looks pretty. But don't look under the hood or you'll run away in terror.

  49. This includes the setup wizard by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This includes more than just the gmail, maps and market applications.

    It includes the google setup wizard as well. Which means, these "google" phones running custom ROMs from here on out will effectively be google-less.

    We would have no way of tying our google account(s) to our phone. This is a big deal to many users. My contacts and multiple calendars are all synced through my google account. Losing this would be a deal breaker for many of us. Google is doing what they are legally obliged to do, and they are losing hundreds of developers at the same time. Their platform just got a whole lot weaker.

  50. Same issue copyrighted software on linux distros by BrookHarty · · Score: 1

    This is the same issue as an linux distro has, trying to include copyrighted software in the installation.

    Nothing new, except this is on the phone, and the "Do No Evil" google is just pissing off customers who already paid for the google apps.

    I have a G1, it sucks out of the box, too many issues. The community gets together fixes them, wraps the fixes and software back up for the phone.
    Now google steps in screws over the community. They should of stepped in and said, and at least offered this guy contract to distribute the applications, since he is fixing BUGS.

    So now, the fallout, fork android. Form an "open-android" market, and replace all of googles applications. This is the perfect time for microsoft to step in and allow its IM clients, Map Clients, and Video clients to be freely used. I support this, google can no longer be trusted, they need to be removed from their little plot to control everything.

  51. Software freedom would fix this. by jbn-o · · Score: 1

    If that's the case, it is all the more reason why we need free software to do these jobs.

  52. Re:Same issue copyrighted software on linux distro by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "should of". You know what, fuck you. If you're older than 7 you have no excuse for this shitty grammar. None of my many foreign friends and acquaintances -- the ones who speak English as a second language -- ever make this mistake. What's your excuse?

  53. Hilter mad at Google for C&D order on Cyanogen by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I don't understand why Google can't work something out, the work that Cyanogen and other developers have done optimizing Android ROMs is nothing short of amazing... If I have an Android phone it already had all those apps on it, so now I will have to back up and restore after each ROM flash, just because of this stupidity... maybe I should ditch the Android phone and just get a fucking iPhone instead...

    Anyway, it seems even Hitler is pissed about this: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9VZHT389eR4

  54. Base level of functionality by Qubit · · Score: 1

    I guess you should get an OpenMoko. They are relatively cheap these days.

    Well to answer the second part, the cheapest price for the OpenMoko Freerunner is currently $250 in the US. That's cheaper than $400 for the HTC Dream. The Palm Pre is only $100 with a 2-year contract, but no carrier-free GSM phone prices are available yet. So the Freerunner is a bit cheaper, but with much less hardware.

    As for the phone itself, last I heard the development was continuing slowly and people were having issues with phone calls and getting the phone to hold a charge longer than a day. I mean, maybe, maybe I could be persuaded to use a phone without SMS, but if the battery has no life, and the thing isn't even meeting basic phone call levels, that's just too big a hurdle.

    I'm really excited about the Palm Pre Challenge that's currently going on. It's a directed, focused push to get working phone calls with FSO on the Pre within a month:

    What: Working voice call with FSO on the Palm Pre within one month.
      When: As soon as the Palm Pre GSM is available in Germany. (2009-10-13)
      Who: Daniel, Jan, Mickey, Simon and Stefan. Who else?

      2009-09-17 First draft for Challenge.
      2009-09-24 Palm an O2 announced the 2009-10-13 as Palm Pre launch date in germany. That means our challenge has a start date now.
      2009-09-25 Kick off some OE work for kernel and rootfs images.

    This seems like a good, focused, reasonable goal that can be attained. I wish them luck!

    --

    coding is life /* the rest is */
  55. So disapointing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Really the core of the problem here is the closeness of Market. This should be an open application part of the system.
    If it was oss, there wouldn't any problem leaving out of ROMs any Google App. It would just be up to the user to
    download them (or _not_).

    Do you imagine a linux system with only dpkg/rpm as oss and apt/yum as closed apps ?

  56. Koolaid by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Try milk instead, it does a body good.

    The Koolaid "Yay Google Is Good(tm)!" thing is so done.

    Tried searching for the Beijing massacre on google.cn lately?

    Sheesh.

  57. miniature by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What is this "Google" you speak of? Surely you mean, "Apple"...

  58. Really a bad move from Google!!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    One more client lost if it goes this way.

    Open source and modding was the only reason for me to go exploring other mobile devices. This is the only reason I haven't bought iPhone yet. And if Google starts preventing people to add their ideas and programs to Google Android I would go for Windows Mobile, which has a lot of modders all around.

    This really came as a SHOCK to me and I was just looking at Hero and Galaxy and deciding which one to buy. Now I will not buy either one of them.

    Really a bad move from Google!!!

  59. mirror/torrent of Cyanogen, grab 'em while you can by sethstorm · · Score: 1

    mininova/TPB do have 4.0.1, 4.0.4, and 4.1.11.1 as torrents if you still want to grab them for a mirror.

    --
    Twitter supports and protects racists - by smearing their critics with the "Hate Speech" label.
  60. mirror by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The ROM seems to have been take offline.
    Mirror for the current cyanogenmod recovery image here: http://www.4shared.com/file/120930789/555ebc1f/cm-recovery-14.html

  61. Good formula to close C&D cases by Ilgaz · · Score: 1

    I hope you will post a similar post when Apple or Microsoft does something like that and close the case.

  62. Open source isn't really free software as speech by Ilgaz · · Score: 1

    This is really interesting one since every time the term "open source" confuses people like that, RMS'es point of open source doesn't have to be "free software" (as in speech) is justified.

    I am not hoping you will understand my post as you attack another poster over a gigantic information/advertising monopoly. Heard the IBM's 1930s sale to Germans? Would it make any difference if the "application" and "device" was completely open source, documented? Would it change the way it was abused?

    Still having problems? Apple iPhone/iPod, has some "license" like a freaking freedom fighter, almost open source fanatic. Does it make any difference for Developers and Users? Can they do whatever they want?

    BTW, what is your problem with Symbian? Everyone doesn't like Google policies doesn't have to be a Symbian developer or user. To justify, Symbian foundation release will be so huge and game changing that everyone ignoring Symbian, especially after Qt acquisition are really making a poor decision right now.

  63. Worse than MS by Ilgaz · · Score: 1

    People doesn't have monetary ties with MS, at least not the majority of them. Each person having "google ads" in his/her blog is a business partner of Google and you can't expect him/her to be objective.

    In every Google story, sites become something like MS dealer conference, all 1000s of them managed to get an account from Slashdot and started posting.

    I am not even mentioning "do no evil" and brain dead actually believing as if such thing would happen. You know, all prophets died very rich as they did no evil :)

  64. This calls for.. by GuruBob · · Score: 0

    The President to get Sergey and Cyanogen up to Washington for a beer..

    its a licensing oops by CG and Google had to protect themselves and heir IP from future violators who are far less community minded than CG.
    its really been blown out of proportion., its been acknowledged and remedied now..

    Sometimes Slashdot can be a storm looking for a teacup.

    These arent the Androids you're looking for..

    Move along, move along...

    --
    Facebook is a woodpecker tapping on the skull of Humanity, Forever.