Apple Is Bullying a Security Company With a Dangerous DMCA Lawsuit
Making tools should not be a crime
This op-ed was written by Kyle Wiens, the founder and CEO of iFixit, a company that publishes repair manuals for electronics and sells parts and tools to consumers. A previous version of this story was originally published on iFixit’s website; it has been updated for OneZero.
Apple has unleashed its legal juggernaut on an innovative iOS security company, and if they win their lawsuit, the damage will reverberate beyond the security community and into the world of repair and maintenance.
Corellium’s software creates virtual iPhones in a web browser so that app developers and security researchers can tinker without needing a physical device. The software is kind of like VirtualBox or Parallels — a container that you can run your own iOS image inside of. It’s nerdy stuff that most people will never need, but it’s genuinely useful. So useful, in fact, that Apple tried to buy the company, according to a court filing from November. When the founders refused, Apple decided to sue them into oblivion.
In a just-filed revision to its lawsuit, Apple has invoked Section 1201 of the Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA), the infamous and often abused copyright law. This claim dramatically raises the stakes for…