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eventer Registered User


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Google bars Android app makers from their own apps eventer Feb 27th, 09, 04:07 PM #1

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If you join the Android developer program, Google will sell you an unlocked Android phone that works on any mobile network. But it can't download paid applications from Google's very own app market.

The Android Market began offering price-tagged applications late last week - at least in the US - but developers wielding unlocked Googlephones soon discovered they couldn't download them, IDG News Service reports.

As it turns out, Google has prevented these developer phones from downloading any application that's copy protected, including paid apps.

Anyone who forks over $25 to join the official Android developer program can then purchase an unlocked version of the T-Mobile G1, the inaugural Googlephone. Price: $400. These phones give developers unfettered access to their hardware and software, and judging from a brief statement from Google, they can somehow circumvent the company's copy protection.

"Copy protection is a tool that provides basic protection to application developers and prevents casual user-to-user pirating of applications," reads a canned statement Google tossed out way. "The Developer version of the G1 is designed to give developers complete flexibility. These phones give developers of handset software full permissions to all aspects of the device, including the ability to install a modified version of the Android Open Source Project. We aren't distributing copy protected applications to these phones in order to minimize unauthorized copy of the applications."

According to one blogging Android developer, Google copy protects apps simply by downloading them to a protected folder. But on unlocked phones, he says, the protected folder isn't protected. In theory, once a paid app is downloaded, a developer could make a copy and return the original for a refund. The Android Market allows refunds within 24 hours of purchase.

So, Google has banned downloads of copy-protected apps on developer phones. The result: Many developers are prevented from downloading their own applications.
Google bars Android app makers from their own apps • The Register


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gadenp Feb 27th, 09, 04:53 PM #2
FTW.... LAME is the world
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eventer Registered User


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eventer Feb 27th, 09, 07:01 PM #3
It just sounds funny that the developers can't download their own apps...
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guy_ Feb 27th, 09, 07:14 PM #4
It makes perfect sense.

This restriction is only for Android Dev Phone 1, and not the G1 device (Tmobile G1/HTC Dream). If you are a developer, why would you want to download through Android Market and pay for your own app? Won't it be already on your own phone since you have developed with it?

And quote
Quote:
The Developer version of the G1 is designed to give developers complete flexibility. These phones give developers of handset software full permissions to all aspects of the device, including the ability to install a modified version of the Android Open Source Project. We aren't distributing copy protected applications to these phones in order to minimize unauthorized copy of the applications
, isn't it a valid reason?
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sabe Super Meanarator


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sabe Feb 27th, 09, 07:43 PM #5
Quote:
According to one blogging Android developer, Google copy protects apps simply by downloading them to a protected folder. But on unlocked phones, he says, the protected folder isn't protected. In theory, once a paid app is downloaded, a developer could make a copy and return the original for a refund. The Android Market allows refunds within 24 hours of purchase.
The problem is here.

Its not completely unreasonable, but I'm sure there are better solutions. So if I want to develop my own apps AND I want to use apps by other people, I need 2 damn phones
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Bonn Feb 27th, 09, 10:09 PM #6
Tot the developer phone is issued free?
Cheong arh...Hoot dah....
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sabe Super Meanarator


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sabe Feb 27th, 09, 10:11 PM #7
Free then everyone will be a developer liao
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techniqu Feb 28th, 09, 02:03 AM #8
seems reasonable....everythings unlocked, which allows for easy exploits of the app market. sounds like a reasonable tradeoff for a legal, unlocked phone.
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