macworld.com — Last week?s news that Apple had incorporated some form of application blacklist into the iPhone 3G certainly got people talking. While the purpose of said blacklist wasn?t apparent, there was still quite a bit of argument over whether or not an application blacklist was a method that Apple should be employing.
Aug 11, 2008 View in Crawl 4
dizzy113Aug 11, 2008
So now we move on from wondering if it?s true to how comfortable we are with this. I guess if apple doesn't do anything like remove NetShare from US iPhones no one will really care.
deucediggalowAug 11, 2008
Dang Apple is the new Microsoft... what happened to the good old days when they were a bunch of carefree hippies rebelling against the suits? Now they are the suits. I'm going with that new Nokia.
Closed AccountAug 12, 2008
You guys know what's seriously ironic?That the iphone network doesnt send viruses via the phone communication. It could spread but only via the contacts on the user's contact list like it would on a computer.But the kill switch could possibly BE used against iphone users to spread a virus to EVERY SINGLE IPHONE USER, if someone found out how to use it.