http://www.alleyinsider.com/2008/7/a...-the-nda-aapl-
:lol:
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This, in the technical world, is like spooning yourself. And yet, Apple seems pleased to be in such a position.
If MS pulled this crap they would be being sued again for anti-trust practices.
I would like to see the full text of the ndaa. That quote has an awful loft of ... in it. Any reporter can tell you that if you leave out choice words when quoting someone you can make them say whatever you want.
And you wouldn't get many people defending it for having a lot of ... in it.Quote:
Originally Posted by GaryMazzone
Exactly what I was thinking.Quote:
Originally Posted by GaryMazzone
Nice to see you back. :)
It's not like they've gone and chose individual words like "No... copying... of our (Apple) material, software... blah blah..." They've actually chosen good sentences out of the thing. True, you need to see the bigger picture to make full judgement, but it's quite fair to say, knowing the company in general, that this is what they mean, and to be quite honest, it's a load of bull.Quote:
Originally Posted by Lord Orwell
Still, I agree with you; I'd like to see the whole thing. I've been needing sleep for ages.
i was referring to a single line with whole snippets removed.Quote:
Originally Posted by kregg
"You agree that the Developer Software licensed hereunder ... will be considered and referred to ... as "Confidential Information"
Here's the whole sentence:
Oddly enough, "terms and conditions of this agreement" pops out at me. Evidently it's against their NDA to tell people what is in the NDA.Quote:
Originally Posted by apple iphone sdk
ROFLMAO. Nice find Lord Orwell.
Also, after I posted, I found out that sentence... :blush:
They're hiding something...
Probably stolen firmware base, like they did with the iPod...
Stolen firmware base? Hello...
isn't their firmware open source?
Built on UNIX doesn't count as open-source.
i said FIRMWARE not OSQuote:
Originally Posted by MaximilianMayrhofer