Slashdot Mirror


Rooted Devices Blocked From Android Movie Market

tekgoblin writes "Google has released the Android Movie Market to Android tablets with Honeycomb 3.1 and in a few weeks for users with Froyo and Gingerbread. However Google has stipulated that the Android Movie Market will only be available to Android devices which are not rooted. So if you have a rooted Android device, don't expect to download anything from the Android Movie Market any time soon (or at least until a workaround is found)."

28 of 321 comments (clear)

  1. (Or at least until a workaround is found) by Palmsie · · Score: 5, Funny

    Which will be in about a week.

    --
    Carl Sagan quotes get you an automatic +5 on all posts.
    1. Re:(Or at least until a workaround is found) by tripleevenfall · · Score: 4, Interesting

      "Hello." -Carl Sagan

  2. Re:Android by MightyMartian · · Score: 4, Funny

    Android has kinda been a fiasco. Security problems, malware, hardware fragmentation, software piracy and now this blocking of rooted devices. Wasn't Android supposed to be open?/blockquote

    No kidding. It's almost as bad as the iPhone.

    --
    The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
  3. 3.99 are you out of your mind? by cultiv8 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I didn't even know there was a such thing as a "Android Movie Market", an honestly don't care, I don't plan to pay $3.99 to "rent" a movie to my phone. I'll be happy once Netflix comes to Droid.

    --
    sysadmins and parents of newborns get the same amount of sleep.
    1. Re:3.99 are you out of your mind? by mariasama16 · · Score: 3, Informative

      Go to http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=1076150, there's2 different modified versions of the Netflix.apk which people have reported success with. Root not required.

    2. Re:3.99 are you out of your mind? by PPH · · Score: 3, Interesting

      For $3.99, it had better run on my 50" 1080p plasma TV.

      --
      Have gnu, will travel.
    3. Re:3.99 are you out of your mind? by jareth-0205 · · Score: 3, Informative

      For $3.99, it had better run on my 50" 1080p plasma TV.

      Well, given quite a lot of the higher end phones come with HDMI now, there's a pretty good chance.

  4. Re:Crap. by RobbieCrash · · Score: 5, Informative

    Google's Android Market != Android

    Google dictating the terms of the Android Market being limited does not mean that Android is closed any more than Amazon requiring you to have an Amazon account to use their market does.

    --
    Keep on knockin'
    https://robbiecrash.me
  5. Obviously required by the studios by Edmund+Blackadder · · Score: 5, Insightful

    For all the idiots that are going to complain about Google reneging on their openness promises this was obviously required by the content owners. There is no way the studios will allow any of their precious precious movies to run on a device without them being absolutely certain that they know where the data goes from the network connection to the screen and they can ensure nobody copies it.

    Believe me, I know. I run Linux and there is no way to get any of the legal paid for movie services on my computer. iTunes does not work, Netflix does not work, the Amazon thing does not work. (I can only get free services like Hulu).

    So it is not Google's fault, Google has no choice about it. In fact they are to be commended on convincing the studios to release their movies on Android at all, because I am sure Android's open source scares the hell out of the studios.

    1. Re:Obviously required by the studios by king+neckbeard · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I really wish Big Content would get some kind of a clue. Stopping a legit method does not stop other methods from working

      --
      This is my signature. There are many like it, but this one is mine.
    2. Re:Obviously required by the studios by symbolset · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Once again the studios are #winning by making it harder to give them money than to just download the movie you want in an open format. [/sarcasm]

      --
      Help stamp out iliturcy.
    3. Re:Obviously required by the studios by rrossman2 · · Score: 3, Informative

      You're an idiot.. you can rent movies/use Netflix on a rooted or non-rooted Android. Just like you can use Netflix on a non-jail broken iPhone.

      The issue is the studios and the license for the Movie Market. Just like Netflix doesn't *always* have the same movies.. they get added and removed as the license agreements with the studios change/expire, etc.

      Just read this article here for a freakin idea of how the studios control the show:
      http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2011/03/23/netflix-loses-dexter-californication_n_839577.html

    4. Re:Obviously required by the studios by theurge14 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      So basically all the Android users who made fun of iOS users for ages are up in arms because Android continues to follow down the iOS path.

    5. Re:Obviously required by the studios by betterunixthanunix · · Score: 3, Insightful

      For all the idiots that are going to complain about Google reneging on their openness promises this was obviously required by the content owners

      How does that change the fact that Google is reneging on their promises?

      We criticized Google for filtering search results in China, so why should we not be critical in this case?

      --
      Palm trees and 8
    6. Re:Obviously required by the studios by Fnord666 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      There is no way the studios will allow any of their precious precious movies to run on a device without them being absolutely certain that they know where the data goes from the network connection to the screen and they can ensure nobody copies it.

      You know, high tech devices like DVD players for example.

      --
      'The tyrant will always find pretext for his tyranny.' - Aesop's Fables
    7. Re:Obviously required by the studios by headLITE · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Movie DVD encryption was broken twelve years ago but that doesn't mean they didn't try.

    8. Re:Obviously required by the studios by syousef · · Score: 4, Insightful

      For all the idiots that are going to complain about Google reneging on their openness promises this was obviously required by the content owners.

      Google then should not have made a promise it could not reasonably be expected to keep. No one forced them to. How does this make people who complain idiots exactly?

      --
      These posts express my own personal views, not those of my employer
    9. Re:Obviously required by the studios by Kynde · · Score: 4, Insightful

      For all the idiots that are going to complain about Google reneging on their openness promises this was obviously required by the content owners.

      That's a load of crap.

      Google could've said no. Just as they should've said no when it was china doing the asking.

      "You want to sell movies in Android? Then sell to those who rooted the devices, too, because it has jack to do with piracy. You fight your piracy wars on your own turf and where it has considerably less collateral damage to legit user experience."

      Having a spine when it counts is what not being evil is all about. Being not evil only when it's parallel to profit, is not being not evil.

      I really need and use the features that rooting the device provides. Without it, I'd be a lot less inclined to even buy Androids. Denying that in the name of DRM is just ridiculous. And Google should've said so.

      --
      1 Earth is warming, 2 It's us, 3 it's royally bad, 4 we need to take action NOW
  6. Re:Android by nurb432 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The device IS open. The store is not. Their store, their rules ( actually its most likely the MPAA's rules ). I don't see a problem with it really. No one is forcing you to use their stores.

    Now when they start trying to prevent you from rooting, or limiting where you can connect to, THEN we have an issue. Until then, its just a choice.

    --
    ---- Booth was a patriot ----
  7. Little overlap by Bifurcati · · Score: 3, Interesting
    I would expect that the people who know how to root their phone are also unlikely to pay $3.99 to rent a movie - I can't imagine there's a lot of overlap or heartache here amongst the users.

    On the other hand, these are also the most tech savvy users who might actually be swayed by a convenient and cheap (and legal) movie downloading system. Certainly I used to buy music from a certain Russian site because the cost was worth the convenience of high quality music on demand.

  8. Re:Android by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 4, Insightful

    They are? Last I checked, you're free to use any third-party video store with Android. For that matter, you could run one of the half dozen BitTorrent clients directly on the phone/tablet in question and get your media that way, if you're so inclined - they're not blocked from the Market (and even if they were, you can always install an .apk).

    The way this is different from Apple is that there any third-party video store app would have to do transactions through Apple, and pay the 30% cut.

  9. Workaround? by mclearn · · Score: 5, Insightful
    If you've rooted your phone, then what guarantee does ANY question posed to the phone have of being legit?

    Q: "Are you a rooted phone?"

    A: "Ummm, why no, I'm not. Yessir. Not a rooted phone at all."

  10. Re:A fiasco in every way but one important one. by gordo3000 · · Score: 4, Informative

    that isn't true. a major difference between jailbreaking and rooting is whether or not the vendor continues to provide you updates. A jailbroken iphone cannot be updated for security or for new features in the OS without possibly losing everything gained from jailbreaking. With jailbreaks, you end up with less functionality in some aspects and more in others and the things you lose can be very consequential.

    On the other hand, a rooted android phone does not (generally) run that risk. There is now 1 example of a store you cannot access for now with a rooted android device.

    as to your points about polish, your opinion is your opinion but don't turn an argument into a chance to market a device.

    as to app count, if this research is reasonable,
    http://asia.cnet.com/crave/study-android-to-overtake-ios-app-count-in-july-62208428.htm

    then android will have more apps soon (July). And if the graph is reasonably accurate, the pace of android submissions continues to accelerate.

    and as we all have read, android marketshare is outstripping iOS by a large clip. Hell, when I got my phone 2 years ago the best choice was an iPhone but even I'm excited to switch from what I've seen. I think the last great benefit to apple is being on AT&T so you can check things online while on the phone, which can be really useful. But I haven't looked to see if other networks support that yet and it isn't an iPhone exclusive.

  11. Re:A fiasco in every way but one important one. by Nemyst · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Wow, talk about fanboyism right?

    -Carrier lock. Apple has a much harder hand on walled gardens, what with not even allowing "competing" apps very often, and we all know how belowed AT&T is. Plus, Nexus One/S anyone? My S had no branding whatsoever, no carrier lock, I have built-in tethering and wifi tethering, I can choose any app that I could possibly like without any restriction.
    -Android is at approximately 360,000 apps (Androlib), while iOS is at roughly 390,000 (148Apps). If you think an 8% difference is enough to make Android the most evil thing ever, just go have fun with Jobs then. I like how 8% is "vast", though, especially considering this is just from the official Android Market.
    -Less polished user interface? Matter of taste I guess. I find the Android interface very attractive, and fragmentation is a term invented by deniers. It was called "flexibility" before that. Flexibility to choose how your OS looks and feels, flexibility to pick your applications, launcher, theme, flexibility to do things that the developers might not initially have thought about, flexibility to make your device your device. The fact you can easily develop apps for Android without having to jump through hoops is a bonus, as somebody who knows how to code but has no interest in publishing apps.
    -I don't exactly know why you're trying to make Apple look like the underdog here, because they clearly are not. Furthermore, I've never, ever seen anybody considering both rooting good and jailbreaking bad. Either they see both as acceptable/good, or they see both as bad. You're just cherry-picking negative reactions to jailbreaking and positive reactions to rooting to make your case, which is fallacious.

    So I'll let you have fun with your conspiracy theories and go back to customizing my Nexus S. Ah, the possibilities!

  12. Re:A fiasco in every way but one important one. by Dhalka226 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Carrier locked, walled garden, locked-down out of the box = Little choice, little freedom

    Ah, sort of, but not quite. Android is open. Much like a BSD license, when one puts essentially no restrictions on something, one of the things that may happen is that people seek to close it up. You could argue that Google could have gone out of their way to prevent it, but you can hardly blame them for it happening. Ultimately this is just another version of the BSD vs. GPL debate. Whose freedom do you protect?

    Further, there are phones and carriers that have these open versions of Android installed, meaning you DO have a choice. Vote with your wallet.

    - When you root, you are locked out of other important features

    A movie store? Which at this point merely SAYS you're "locked out" of it? Do you not think that somebody will devise a way to have a rooted Android phone go "yeah man, I'm completely locked down! Movie please?" Assuming such is even necessary as we speak.

    - Fewer apps than iOS = Less choice = less freedom

    Fewer apps = less choice = less freedom eh?

    Well, shit. I hope linux users read your post so that they can understand how their operating system has less freedom than Windows. Poor deluded souls!

    - Less polished user interface, more fragmentation = less flexibility, smaller userbase, less choice = less freedom

    Oh I get it. You're an Apple fanboi.

    I didn't particularly agree with anything you had to say, but at least up until now they've been facts (albeit ones spun to your liking). Now you're annointing your opinion as fact. Not only that, you've wandered so far into the realm of ridiculous that I hope you have a fucking rope tied to your waist to find your way back. How good a UI is has to do with user freedom? Give me a break.

    Fragmentation? It's an issue -- for developers. Even if we're going to let you have a pass on this one without spinning it in the opposite direction, you've already included it. It means less apps. Maybe.

    All of these being simple flaws in your own argument, without making a counter-argument at all and taking most of your points without contention. Obviously it is quite easy to contend pretty much every single one of them if somebody who actually cares about the Android vs. iPhone pissing contest were so inclined.

    In short: Your post is nothing but your opinions, presented as facts. In your terms, it is a fiasco in every way.

  13. Re:Its own path thanks by TrekkieGod · · Score: 4, Informative
    They tried.

    . Jailbreakers released a fix.

    --

    Warning: Opinions known to be heavily biased.

  14. Re:Android by SanityInAnarchy · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Do you not see the humour in the fact that one you've "rooted" your "open" phone, you're now locked out of the store run by the maker of that "open" phone?

    I don't see the humor. I suppose I see the irony, but it doesn't in fact make the phone less open, any more than TiVo made Linux less open. The main difference is that it's not normal for Android phones to allow users to install their own OS without first finding an exploit of some sort, and that is a problem, but I don't see that being at all related to the video store -- the issue here is with the store, not the devices.

    I'm just pointing out that Android fanboys are just as blind to the idiocy relating to their chosen platform as the Apple fanboys.

    I suppose that's the definition of a fanboy, but I don't think you've shown that. Android as a whole is not idiotic, and neither is iOS. Aspects of them are idiotic, and I don't see anyone here "blind" to the problems with Android, though, curiously, there seem to be too many people who see the Apple App Store's closed nature as a good thing. Still, even among people who own iPhones, it seems like most people accept Apple's tyranny as something they can live with, not as something they'd prefer -- that is, they see it as a worthwhile exchange for a better experience overall.

    And hey, AC, at least you've found a way to feel superior to fanboys of both.

    --
    Don't thank God, thank a doctor!
  15. Re:A fiasco in every way but one important one. by SanityInAnarchy · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Let's look at how open they are:

    Yes, let's.

    - Carrier locked, walled garden, locked-down out of the box = Little choice, little freedom

    This is a problem. However, if the existence of these is enough to make Android "not open", then neither is Linux, BSD, or, well, anything. There are TVs which run Linux, and they sure as hell don't let you install anything you want on them. Those TVs are not open, therefore Linux isn't? Is that what you're saying?

    - Must root to be able to use important features

    Which?

    - When you root, you are locked out of other important features

    Again, which? The only one we know of so far is a single video store, far from the only video store. If that's "important" to you, I feel sorry for how empty your life must be.

    - Fewer apps than iOS = Less choice = less freedom

    Even if this were true, and it's not clear it is, the apps which we do have are barely restricted even in the official market, and you don't have to buy them from the official market. In fact, unless the carrier locks the device, there's nothing stopping you from installing software from other sources, and you don't need root to do so.

    See if this helps: Let's suppose that all iOS had was fart apps, while Android has both fart apps and actually useful apps. Would iOS then have "more freedom" because it had 10 billion fart apps, while Android only had a few hundred useful apps that were actually unique and useful?

    And I haven't even addressed the massive amount of additional freedom developers get. I mean, let's start with, I don't need to buy a Mac to develop with. I can choose my own tools to a large degree, but even if I go with the official SDK, I can keep right on using my Linux laptop, or even a desktop that isn't an overpriced workstation. If I can make a programming language compile to Android, I can use it -- there has never even been the threat of limiting it to one or two languages as Apple tried to do.

    - Less polished user interface,

    WTF does a user interface have to do with freedom?

    more fragmentation = less flexibility,

    Problem: The PC is already "fragmented", and Linux itself even moreso. What "flexibility" have they lost? And what "flexibility" is missing from Android, for that matter?

    smaller userbase,

    First, dead wrong -- Android actually has a much larger userbase. I don't know where you get that from.

    Second, WTF does this have to do with freedom? Again, from this, I'd have to conclude that Linux and OS X are both less free than Windows.

    less choice = less freedom

    But you haven't shown less choice.

    iPhone jailbreak == Android root

    I can buy a Nexus S which is literally designed to be rooted. Where can I buy an iPhone that Apple hasn't tried their damndest to prevent me from rooting, let alone given me the tools to do it right in the official SDK?

    After jailbreak == You can use all iTunes, Apple App Store, AND alternate sources

    After rooting, the only thing I can't use is one video store. I suppose that puts a jailbreak ahead if I were to grant your premise that it's equivalent to rooting my Android phone -- except I don't need to root it to use alternate sources, and alternate sources pretty much make this video store irrelevant.

    Vastly more apps == Vastly more choice, freedom

    Even if there were numerically more apps, you haven't shown that this is "choice" in any meaningful sense.

    Less fragmentation, more polish == More ease of use...

    That is the only one I can give you, since:

    larger community,

    Factually wrong.

    --
    Don't thank God, thank a doctor!