Becoming the deDECTed.org spokesman
Yesterday the members of the deDECTed.org
team decided to pronounce me their official spokesman.
It's not that I didn't already have way too much work anyway - but I strongly
agree that the project needs somebody who is non-partisan and not affiliated
with some of the bigger entities involved with the project.
Hopefully I can use this role to clarify some of the misunderstandings and
apparent misrepresentations that the project had to suffer with.
Pavel Machek looking for Android exploits
In his recent bog
post and mails, well-known
Linux kernel developer Pavel Machek is looking for exploitable security holes
in his Android phone in order to root it.
He is addressing the very fact that I also cannot re-iterate often enough: If I
buy a product, then I own it. If I own it, only I decide what software runs on
the device or doesn't run. The cell phone makers and mobile operators make us
buy the devices, not rent them. So they have not the least right to
restrict their customers from doing whatever they want on the product they own.
If those companies want to own their devices, they should resort to renting
phones rather than selling them. But rather than following this logical
consequence, they decide to use technical measures to distort the
ownership/property situation of the product. They can still charge the customer
for the full price of the product and literally sell it, while not actually
transferring the inherent power of ownership. It's like selling a car but don't
giving the keys along with it.
This is now the "Thanks" that the Linux Kernel developers get from companies
like Google, Android or T-Mobile. They thank for being able to use the Linux
kernel with locking out the very same people who wrote that kernel in the first
place - as well as every other legitimate FOSS developer who wants to
exercise his right to run modified versions of the program.
Welcome to the brave new world. I wish I had the time and resources to fight
an example case against this kind of behavior. It is not against the wording
of the GPLv2, but for me (and my lawyers) definitely against the spirit and the
intent of it. Maybe I need to change priorities, as it now isn't only Motorola
but also Google/Android/T-Mobile who are engaging in this outrageous act against
what is probably the most important practical freedom of Free Software.
For the Motorola MAGX devices, OpenEZX hackers were luckily able to find
relatively simple ways to circumvent its security, and thus the practical
immediate need for any legal action. Let's hope the G1 has a similar fate soon.