Why Apple Denied the Google Latitude App
awyeah writes "A recently revealed Apple patent looks remarkably similar to the functionality of Google Latitude, which Apple relegated to WebApp status earlier this year. Obviously if Apple is working on their own version of Google Latitude (or owns the IP rights to this functionality), they'd be hesitant to put an app with the same functionality on their devices from another company."
This begs the question, if Google already had an app out, who did it first?
Obviously the patent process takes years.
Security is mostly a superstition... Avoiding danger is no safer in the long run than outright exposure. - Helen Keller
Of course, if someone had prior art to my IP, i'd bury it too.
Has there been a single good thing to come out of software patents? It seems like every single day there is a story posted about a patent that has clear prior art or is trivial and doesn't innovate or invent anything. The US needs to stop software patents if they want to let technology innovate.
Taxation is legalized theft, no more, no less.
Back in the day we (including myself) used to get mad at MS for all the anti-competitive things they did.
Now Apple comes along with stuff that MS never dreamed of (or could have got away with) and everybody loves them. Now I get to listen to my friends talk about what a wonderful and cool company Apple is and how they invented everything.
What is going on here?
"Obviously if Apple is working on their own version of Google Latitude (or owns the IP rights to this functionality), they'd be hesitant to put an app with the same functionality on their devices from another company."
That's not obvious at all to me. It harms the vibrancy of their marketplace, it harms the goodwill of the developer community, and ultimately, it would appear to harm the competitiveness of the device by hindering competition for improved functionality. The only reason they can get away with this BS is because they're Apple, the 900 lb gorilla of the new generation smartphone market at the moment.
I have an iPhone, and it's a wonderful device, but as soon as my contract runs out (maybe sooner), I'll be moving to a different platform, and this is exactly why.
As long as the iPhone is a closed platform with the only way to get apps through the app store, you will be dealing with this. Apple isn't going to allow competing applications on the device because they simply don't have to. They give a good song and dance about how closed the device is being about the "user experience," but the simple truth is that they don't want competition from other sources. That's their business model, it's how they work.
It's a crying shame, because Apple really is a good company when it comes to style and design, and especially in figuring out exactly what scratches consumers' itches. But this is almost historically identical to what happened with the Macintosh a couple of decades ago. They kept it so closely-held and closed that when the PC came along, which allowed users to shrug off proprietary and use it how they wanted to instead of how some company told them to, Apple damn near went out of business.
I really do hate to see them rebuild their reputation (and market value) again, just to throw it all away like they did last time, but damned if it doesn't look like that's exactly what they're trying to do.
* Jailbreak
* Install apps
* If you ever need warranty service, reflash with original OS before sending in
93rd rule of Slashdot: No matter how obvious my sarcasm is, my comment will be taken seriously by someone.
There are many of us who view this stuff poorly. I have not, do not, and will not own any Apple products. I simply do not like their closed platforms and anti-competitive nature, and I certainly won't pay more for the privilege of being restricted. Yes they have some nice hardware, but that in itself cannot overcome their approach to doing business.
No manufacturer has the right to prohibit person A from installing on a device he owns software written by person B: any legal or technological measures to this end are immoral, and ought to be barred by consumer protection laws.
is that it requires that the app approvers know what patents Apple has in the process.
This is of course a possibility; it's also a possibility that there's an IP lawyer looking over every submitted (or even ever just-about-to-be-approved) app, for just that kind of thing. But that doesn't really fit with the workflow descriptions that have come out into the open, so I don't think it's very likely.
(It's also possible that he reviewers are given general directions occasionally, such as, "All Google-submitted apps must be sent to such-and-such for review" or "Any app that uses location services in a social network context must be approved by upper management." Obviously, I made those up :).)
It probably conflicts with the built-in functionality of "Google Maps". That is actually a violation of Apple's rules. Google should know this.
That said: They should probably just approve it.
I agree that that is what "beg the question" meant originally, and that is what it should mean. Unfortunately the incorrect use has become so widespread that it is even mentioned in the dictionaries. From the New Oxford American Dictionary:
beg the question:
1 (of a fact or action) raise a question or point that has not been dealt with; invite an obvious question.
2 avoid the question; evade the issue.
3 assume the truth of an argument or proposition to be proved, without arguing it.
It is sad, but to the "incorrect" use appears first and the original use appears last.
Apple doesn't have to provide a way for you to put apps onto any of their products. They have a product with some restrictions to help protect their image/brand. They have never said that they would allow any application written to be put in the app store. They also don't have to worry about antitrust because there are other devices that you can buy with its own set of restrictions and apps. I would go as far as to say that Apple is being pretty kind about people circumventing their software restrictions, jailbreaking is against the TOS you sign when you buy the phone and they haven't bothered any Hackintosh builders unless they were selling them.
Apple isn't being deceptive, stop acting like this is the biggest human rights violation since slavery.
DidnMt Nokia have such a product long before Google?
Max.
Wow someone's memory is utter shit; it was the Google Voice app that got rejected, not Latitude.
Sensationalism FAIL!!!
is that it requires that the app approvers know what patents Apple has in the process.
...or far more likely it could mean that approves have a list of gidelines in which they refer to when approving apps, and those gidelines forbid certain kinds of apps, such as those that allow tethering or ones that show the presence of friends on a map that Latitude offers. I don't see why it would require anyone to be in the know of internal app development there.
"I don't necessarily agree with everything I say." - Marshall McLuhan
This looks like an application specific front end (with compass) like APRS works for ham radio.
See aprs.fi and enter the call sign of a ham radio equipped with a GPS (like the Yaesu VX-8R).
It just opens the door to anyone and maybe adds a friends list.
Words and phrases change meaning over time. It's a fact of life. Just look at the phrase "The exception that proves the rule". People today take that to mean that an exception to a rule somehow makes it even stronger, which is nonsensical. The meaning of "proves" in that phrase was "to test". You showed something was true by proving it, but you could also show something as false by proving it. The word "prove" itself hasn't changed a whole lot, but it did not have the automatic affermative conotation it has in modern usage. I.e. if you said you proved something, it did not automatically mean you proved it true, you could just have easily proved it false. In other words, the phrase meant something like "The exception that tests the valididity of the rule". Obviously that means something much different than what people take it to mean today.
Security is mostly a superstition... Avoiding danger is no safer in the long run than outright exposure. - Helen Keller
I don't think it necessarily has to be the way you're describing.
Seems to me the easiest way to implement such a policy at Apple would be to draw up a set of rules for reviewers to follow, something like this:
1. If an app is a dialer, deny it because it duplicates dialer functionality
2. If the app contains Apple logos, deny it because it infringes our trademarks
etc.
with an entry for
X. If the app contains a way to place the user's friends on a map, deny it because it duplicates functionality.
No need for reviewers to know about about patents, no need for lawyers to look at each submission.
This is a perfect example of why I won't buy Apple products and why I won't own an iPhone.
Long live Android.
That's alright. They probably balance out those who come to bash Apple with no excuses at all.
http://www.rootstrikers.org/
I am interested in your thoughts and ideas and I would like to subscribe to your ... facebook group.
"they'd be hesitant to put an app with the same functionality on their devices"
But, you see, it's my device. I bought it. I'd like to be able to choose between the Google product and the Apple product and use the best one.
What does this have to do with monopolies? It's not like Apple controls the market for mobile phone software. There are plenty of alternative choices.
... and then they built the supercollider.
Doesn't anyone find this creepy where you allow some company to find your location and see how you associate with anyone at any given time. Of course throw in the Patriot Act.
FBI Audit Exposes Widespread Abuse Of Patriot Act Powers
http://www.aclu.org/national-security/fbi-audit-exposes-widespread-abuse-patriot-act-powers
FOIA: National Security Letters (NSLs)
http://www.eff.org/issues/foia/07656JDB
FBI Employees Face Criminal Probe Over Patriot Act Abuse
http://www.wired.com/politics/law/news/2007/07/exigentinvestigation
FBI Admits More Privacy Violations
http://yro.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=08/03/06/2310206
Apple has really outdone themselves in terms of disgusting patent applications. Patenting sending my location to someone else?? That has many years of prior art.
We really need a patent system in which companies like Apple can be sued for stiff punitive damages when filing bad patents like this.
Words and phrases change meaning over time.
Yup. It's also interesting how on a site like Slashdot, where people regularly mock the wider world for many things that all more or less boil down to resistance to change, there is apparently a sizable group of people who continually fail to accept this - the most obvious example being the "hacker" vs. "cracker" debates that repeatedly played out here over the past few years.
Words change meaning. Languages grow, morph, and sometimes die. Deal with it, guys.
#DeleteChrome
Actually, you've got it exactly backwards. Apple nearly went out of business because they went more open and allowed Mac clones. Now that they are (arguably) more closed in that respect, they are extremely successful.
Apple's woes had nothing to do with allowing clones; Apple nearly went out of business because MacOS was a bad, proprietary platform and because Apple was bleeding money at an enormous rate.
Apple is successful now because they have been piggy-backing on open source technologies (Mach, gcc, tons of libraries) and therefore been saving development costs and delivering a better product, and because they are tightly controlling expenses (including R&D expenses).
But you know that.
"Resistance to change" is no vice when the change isn't an improvement.
"Begging the question" has a perfectly good meaning that doesn't particularly need to be displaced out of ignorance, entropy and illiteracy.
When your socks develop holes, you don't praise them for "morphing".
-=Maggie Leber=-
When your socks develop holes, you don't praise them for "morphing".
Maybe you don't.
The only monopoly that Apple has is the monopoly they have on ownership rights of their own production, and they have every right to that. They've decided to go this way. Are they using "market power" to control the market? I don't see how they do. They aren't even the top-selling smartphone, and they don't dominate the cell phone market in any way. Is their "market power" crowding out competitors by coercion? No, the only monopoly they have is with all those who buy iPhones VOLUNTARILY. Are they forcing cell phone manufacturers to keep only iPhones in stock? No.
Your definition of "monopoly" is legally incompetent. Psystar had just this definition, and they lost, big-time.
By the way, how many suits has Apple launched against jailbreakers? Um, none. Against hobbyist cloners of the Mac OS X to run on generic Windows machines? I believe the answer is, uh, none. They have forced some takedowns which were a little too obvious. But there's no suits against piraters of OS X hacked for Windows. Hell, they don't even put serial numbers on their OS.
All three definitions are essentially the same thing. The "obvious question" you invite in the first definition is the assumption that something is true when you're trying to prove that it is. It's a way of evading the issue of the question you're begging by raising a question you have not dealt with.
It's the most basic form of logical fallacy in political discourse today. If they couldn't beg questions, the GOP would collapse.
No. Definitions of words change. Maxims don't, though perhaps with the end of literacy, people just find it too laborious to understand what the saying means.
Umm, would you care to argue how I'm being willfully dishonest? What exactly I've said that isn't true? I'd really like to know, but you don't even seem to be attempting to make a logical argument.
... and then they built the supercollider.
There's no denying that Apple has a monopoly on applications for the iPhone, though, whether legally or not.
come on. though you do get the feeling that even if Apple contributed directly towards human rights abuses you would probably support their decision, somehow.
Er...
What if Microsoft were to ban the installation of OpenOffice, LotusNotes, Word Perfect, etc. because they compete with their Office? I bet this would be a whole different conversation.
Just like that time when Microsoft said I had to use Internet Explorer. Everyone made a big deal about it back then, but it turns out that IE ended up being the best, most cutting edge browser in the end anyway!
or else!
Obviously if Apple is working on their own version of Google Latitude (or owns the IP rights to this functionality), they'd be hesitant to put an app with the same functionality on their devices from another company."
If this were Microsoft, we'd be talking about how evilly they were using their monopoly power, to quash a competitor.
How interesting that we say Obviously Apple would do this...
In other words, we have already taken for granted that Apple is an even more evil monopolist than MS.
Microsoft tilted the playing field by giving their software an advantage (such as private APIs), but they never (that we know of) "blocked" competing application programs altogether from their platform, for the purpose of ensuring they were the first to market...
Google's app was probably full of Googlish "we will scrape all info we can find on your device and send to or servers just in case" features that Google fans seem to find a shedload of excuses for.
I can distribute any Windows application I want to whomever I want in a multitude of ways to choose from with or without involving a third party in doing so. Is Microsoft open? No, but in that sense, it's a hell of a lot more open than Apple is.
Actually Apple's vetting process for developers is just as stupid as it is for apps. I paid my $99 to Apple to join their developer program. They demanded documentation that I was who I said I was. I sent them some more paperwork in addition to what I had already filled out. Then they demanded that I send them notarized documentation of my identity, I shit you not. It's not like I have a very common name or have been the victim of ID theft in the past. It's not like I've ever had a problem establishing who I was with anyone in the past.
After several months of trying to satisfy them, I finally said to hell with it, I want my $99 back, and told them that I'll be developing on non-Apple platforms from now on.
So yeah, I would completely disagree with your assertion that anyone can submit apps to the app store. Aside from the obvious (TFA that this submission is about), Apple makes you jump through as many hoops before you can even get to the point where you can submit an app.
You mean besides bricking jailbroken phones?
For one thing, before people started gratuitously applying the word "bricking" to iPhones, that used to mean an action that rendered a device useless beyond repair, which I've never seen happen to an iPhone. As messed up as it may get, you can almost always get back to a known working state.
For another -- unsurprisingly, updates that expect a given phone state are often unkind to phones in a modified state. Failing to test for and accommodate a hacked phone state is a bit inconvenient, but if it seems like a "crackdown" to you, I don't know what to tell you.
Tweet, tweet.
yes. Many people just don't know this about Apple. In the mid to late 80's Apple was well known for being extremely obtuse about low level programming information and tools for the Mac. Not only did they refuse to give out development tools for free, but they also refused to allow others to have enough information to develop their own .. at any price.
I just want to run a quick sanity check here: do you actually know what Apple's toolsuite was called back then? Also, can you name, say, three different third-party Mac development tools circa 1989? Without consulting Google or Wikipedia? I'm gonna guess based on your claims that the answer is no, because I could name three third party dev environments of the top of my head (MacASM, Lightspeed/Think C, Macintosh Common Lisp) and possibly point you to a circa 1980s manual for most pieces of information you're looking for.
Expensive, maybe, certainly not free, and generally not a joy to develop for (well, MCL was cool), but they gave developers -- even third parties producing dev tools -- plenty to work with.
Tweet, tweet.
They give a good song and dance about how closed the device is being about the "user experience," but the simple truth is that they don't want competition from other sources.
Apple embeds an email client into the device. It's not some extra you have to pay for. It's included.
They would lose no money by allowing a company to sell a replacement email client via the store.
They would in fact MAKE MONEY by allowing a company to sell a replacement email client via the store, in the form of transaction overhead.
Same with the web browser. Same with the iPod app. Same with the phone "app". And the SMS "app". And the "app store" app.
Yet they will not allow these to be replaced.
On the other hand, Apple has turned a blind eye to third-party recreations of the clock app, the camera app, the voice recorder app (retroactively), the notes app, the calendar app, and the calculator app. Re-creations of those abound, because they do not constitute "core" highly-cross-integrated functionality.
Clearly their regard for user experience is more than just a "song and dance". Take your "simple truth" back to the pound, because that dog won't hunt.
You're willfully being a stupid piece of shit. Actually, you probably can't help it.
Gee, that sounds an awful lot like how jailbreaking voids your warranty, DOESN'T IT. What were you complaining about again?
with little purpose other than to brick jailbroken phones, you mean.
To be a bit pedantic, there simply never has been an update that bricked a phone.
But even allowing a little latitude for the word "brick" -- which updates didn't do anything other than interfere with the functioning of jailbroken phones?
Tweet, tweet.
Point. Match. Game.
Go ahead and google that. I'm sure you'll need to.
Hi there. I'm a language/linguistics professor at a major university.
Language is not really bound by external rules; the "rules" are really just patterns that we have noticed and have used to describe the features of language after the fact.
The simple fact of the matter is this: "Begging the question" has been used to mean "raising the question" for so long and by so many people that it is pointless to even suggest that they are not equal. They are. This belongs in the same bin as "don't end a sentence with a preposition." It's a rule that no one follows and which makes no real sense.
As a bit of "action research," I quizzed some of my colleagues on this. No one--and this is a group of people with advanced degrees in linguistics--knew that using "begging the question" to mean "raising the question" was, in fact, incorrect.
In fact, I just did a search of the Corpus of Contemporary English. Do you know how many instances of the so-called "correct" usage of this phrase I found? --In this 400+-million-word linguistic resource? Wanna guess?
Zero.
Hang it up. You have lost.
An iphone app called Catchif has accomplished the location sharing in real-time through push notification messages. check this out: www.catchif.com
People have every right to implement "communist" policies if they so wish.
By the way, how many suits has Apple launched against jailbreakers?
They may not have filed any lawsuits yet, but they have petitioned the DMCA rulemaking committee to declare it illegal.
Visual IRC: Fast. Powerful. Free.
I wish I had mod points for this one. Someone please mod the parent up.
Why, no, I haven't meta-moderated lately. Thanks for asking!
If you don't like the terms we set for living in our community, you can leave at any time of your choice. You stay by your own choice just as much as people buy Apple products. No one is forcing you to be here. Whatever happened to individual responsibility?
Apple is perfectly free to decline to do business in our community if it doesn't like our terms for doing so.
In the same way a traditional phone company could have a monopoly, even though there was a competitor the next town over.
Whether it's legal or not is irrelevant. Monopolies are not expressly illegal.
Obviously if Apple is working on their own version of Google Latitude (or owns the IP rights to this functionality), they'd be hesitant to put an app with the same functionality on their devices from another company.
I don't you about you, but for me, this is far from obvious. It might be a common practice amongst companies like Apple, but it's thankfully/hopefully not the logical thing to do.