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Logging other people's keystrokes or breaking into other people's computer without their permission can be considered illegal by the courts of many countries. The monitoring software reviewed here is ONLY for authorized system administrators and/or owners of computers. We assume no liability and are not responsible for any misuse or damage caused by the keylogging software. The end user of this software is obliged to obey all applicable local, state, federal and other laws in his country of residence.

December 24th, 2008

Psystar: No conspiracy against Apple

Mac clone maker Psystar Corp. denied it is at the center of a cabal whose purpose is to steal Apple Inc.'s intellectual property, documents recently filed with a federal court show.

"Psystar denies that said activities are unlawful and improper," the company said in its Dec. 16 response to allegations made earlier by Apple. "Psystar likewise denies the suggestion that there exists a concerted effort to commit infringement of Apple's intellectual property rights, to breach or induce the breach of Apple's otherwise unenforceable license agreements, and to violate state and common law unfair competition laws."

The Florida-based computer seller, which is embroiled in a lawsuit with Apple over its installation of Mac OS X on Intel-based machines, was reacting to Apple's charges last month, when the computer and consumer electronics maker alleged that Psystar was not acting alone.

Then, Apple accused 10 additional individuals or companies of colluding with Psystar, but did not name names. "Persons other than Psystar are involved in Psystar's unlawful and improper activities described in this amended complaint," Apple charged in a late November filing with U.S. District Court Judge William Alsup. "The true names or capacities, whether individual, corporate or otherwise, of these persons are unknown to Apple. Consequently, they are referred to herein as John Does 1 through 10."

Apple said at the time that it would reveal the John Does' names when it uncovered them.

Reports in the general media as well as on Apple-centric sites seized on Apple's claims, with some speculating that Psystar was just the front man for bigger and better-funded rivals of Apple.

Elsewhere in last week's filing, Psystar admitted that it has come up with a way to circumvent code that locks the Mac OS X operating system to Apple hardware, but denied that the dodge violates Apple's copyright.

Previously, Psystar said that Apple had added code to the operating system so that when someone tried to run it on non-Apple hardware, Mac OS X would fall into a "kernel panic" or "infinite loop." Psystar made those claims in an effort to refute Apple's charge that the company violated the Digital Millennium Copyright Act. Psystar said the Mac OS X code "that causes kernel panic and/or infinite loop does not constitute a technological copyright protection measure."

Apple first sued Psystar in July, charging it with breaking copyright, trademark and software licensing laws by installing Mac OS X on computers it sold for substantially less than comparably equipped Macs.

Although Psystar countered in August with a lawsuit of its own that accused Apple of multiple antitrust violations, the judge dismissed those charges in mid-November.

Psystar then revised its countersuit, claiming that Apple conducted "brazen misuse" of federal copyright laws.

The case is slated for trial in April.


Source: ComputerWorld




All news for September 18th, 2009:
20:13Microsoft Internet Explorer SSL security hole lingers
20:11Conservatives call for DNA databases to be reduced
20:09McAfee warns of bogus security suite
20:08Security market remains buoyant in choppy waters
20:07The good and bad of government in the cloud
20:05Vista, Windows 7 Are More Secure than Snow Leopard
20:04Will Google's Buy of reCAPTCHA Hurt Internet Security?
20:01HHS guts health-care breach notification law, groups warn
20:00Man gets 15 months for E-Trade skimming scam
19:59Sophisticated botnet causing a surge in click fraud
19:59Microsoft sues scareware scammers
19:58Software company fined for trading with the enemy
19:58Misdirected spyware infects Ohio hospital
19:57Firefox's Flash check drives 10M to Adobe's download
19:55Microsoft, Yahoo in informal talks with EU over search deal

All news for September 17th, 2009:
19:59Wireless Intrusion Detection and Prevention Systems: Selection Criteria
19:58How to Compare and Use Wireless Intrusion Detection and Prevention Systems
19:54Social Networking a Tool for More Secure ID Management?
19:521.8 million UK postcodes available online
19:51Batman 'glide' disabled in anti-piracy measure
19:47Study: eBay, Yahoo among most trusted companies
19:45One in eight Brits hit by identity theft
19:44Attack E-mails Use Fake Shipping Confirmation Ruse
19:44An Amazing Laptop Recovery Story
19:41Has Conroy's dept received filter report?
19:39Will security concerns darken Google's government cloud?
19:35New phishing attack chats up victims
19:34Report: Skype founders sue Skype
19:34Google buys reCAPTCHA to boost book scanning efforts
19:33Microsoft offers tools for secure application development



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