Google blocks paid applications to prevent the use of unlocked G1 phones

Published on: 26th February, 2009
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Google

Google s development-oriented variant of the T-Mobile  G1 has been barred from downloading premium Android applications from the Android Market. The Google Dev Phone 1, as it is being called by the folks in Mountain View, is reportedly unable to play nice with those for-pay applications that recently started trickling into the Android Market.

People who bought an unlocked version of the Android G1 phone are no longer allowed to download new paid applications from the Market, after a change Google made late last week.

Google is prohibiting users of the unlocked phones from viewing copy-protected applications, including those that cost to download.

The Developer version of the G1 comes unlocked to any particular mobile operator and is priced at $400. Anyone who joins the Android developer program for $25 can buy the phone.

Last week, Google employees began replying to questions people posted on the Android Market Help Web site about being unable to see copy protected applications in the store. "If you're using an unlocked, developer phone, you'll be unable to view any copy-protected application," wrote Google employee Ash on the help site in reply to a user's question on Friday. "This is a change that was made recently."

While Google offered only slim details about why it made the change, it could be an attempt to close a loophole that reportedly allows users of the unlocked phone to download paid applications for free. "The Developer version of the G1 is designed to give developers complete flexibility," Google said in a statement. "These phones give developers of handset software full permissions to all aspects of the device... We aren't distributing copy protected applications to these phones in order to minimize unauthorized copy of the applications."

A couple of developers have theories about the issue behind the move. Tim at the Strazzere.com blog discovered that protected applications are automatically downloaded into a private folder on Android phones. Most phone users can't access that file but users of the Developer phone can.

That means a Developer phone user could buy an application, copy it from the private folder, return the application for a refund and then re-download the application to the phone, the developers say. The Android Market allows anyone to return an application within 24 hours.

The Phandroid blog and a few developers commenting on the blog said they were able to download and copy-protected applications. Some developers are surprised that assigning the application to a specific folder is the only copy protection given to applications.

It's unclear how many people have the unlocked version of the phone. But some vocal developers are very annoyed that they paid $400 for the phone and aren't allowed to access all of the apps in the store.

One, who goes by the name bakgwailo, is proposing a "developer revolt," where all developers pull their applications from the store. "It would be the only way to show Google that this is NOT acceptable, and that devs are not second (third?) class citizens on the Market," he wrote. "I do not know about you, but I am beyond angry that I can not even see my own paid app on the Market with my 400 dollar dev phone!"

"This is a big problem for everyone who has a Dev phone," one developer using the name oscillik wrote. "Assuming that we're pirates is very offensive."

 

The consensus seems to be that Google is trying to prevent application piracy and payment fraud by locking out Google Dev Phone 1 users from putting hands on paid apps - the very same apps that they developed with their $400 Google Dev Phone 1.

The problem lies in the Google Dev Phone 1’s unlocked file-system that gives the user full reign over the handset’s root directory - the key to hacking the bloody daylights out of the handset. Because the Google Dev Phone 1 is unlocked (a different kind of “unlocked” than the kind that lets your GSM handset play on any GSM network in the world), Google may be worried that the premium apps could be extracted and pirated. Another possible scenario would have an Android-developing malcontent downloading a paid app, copying the application to a computer, requesting a refund, and then simply transferring the application back to the Dev Phone 1.

Source: macworld.com
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