iPad lousy for geek education

I was aware of the Free Software Foundation‘s protests outside of the iPad release event, but I’ve been impressed at the reaction of some insightful bloggers and programmers. They are all expressing their frustration with the device’s restrictions on “tinkering.” On a normal computer, a user can install whatever application they like, and with the right skills a user can dig into the guts of the machine–and in this process learn a lot. What I really like about these posts is that they highlight how tinkering is absolutely necessary to spawning interest and creativity.

I started with Mark Pilgrim’s assessment (thanks to Slashdot), which begins with a great hook:

When DVD Jon was arrested after breaking the CSS encryption algorithm, he was charged with “unauthorized computer trespassing.” That led his lawyers to ask the obvious question, “On whose computer did he trespass?” The prosecutor’s answer: “his own.”

If that doesn’t make your heart skip a beat, you can stop reading now.

He continues to explain how his experience with Apple’s own ][e started him on the path of tinkering with computers at a very early age. He concludes by pointing out that future tinkerers have two choices: buy an annual $99 development license from Apple (beyond the budget of most pre-teens), or as his final assessment states:

And I know, I know, I know you can “jailbreak” your iPhone, (re)gain root access, and run anything that can motherfucking run. And I have no doubt that someone will figure out how to “jailbreak” the iPad, too. But I don’t want to live in a world where you have to break into your own computer before you can start tinkering. And I certainly don’t want to live in a world where tinkering with your own computer is illegal.

Once upon a time, Apple made the machines that made me who I am. I became who I am by tinkering. Now it seems they’re doing everything in their power to stop my kids from finding that sense of wonder. Apple has declared war on the tinkerers of the world. With every software update, the previous generation of “jailbreaks” stop working, and people have to find new ways to break into their own computers.

Pilgrim quotes a statement by Alex Payne about the iPad offering a better model for the average user–one where the computer is a simple to use device that has all of the complexity hidden away. He pointedly argues:

Apple’s decision to make the iPad a closed device is an artificial one. It’s been several years since I worked in security, but as best I understand, there’s no practical technical reason why the iPad must be its particular flavor of closed in order to be usable and reliable. It’s still possible to enforce sandboxing and resource limitations in an open system; it simply requires a different approach.

His view can perhaps be summed in a quote by yet another blogger, Lifehacker’s Adam Pash: “To say that ‘either a device is user friendly or it’s open’ is a false dichotomy.”

Essentially the argument of all three is that there is no reason to lock tinkerers out of the iPhone and iPad. What’s more, they argue that for future geeks it’s actually important that users be able to look under the hood if they want to. The culmination of these technical locks, the law protecting those locks, and the processes created to restrict the software that runs on these devices is not conducive to creativity as Apple might have you believe.

To answer Pash’s question “As power users, do we really want to send the message to Apple and other hardware manufacturers that we’re cool with them taking away our choice?” I think those of us who believe the answer to this question is “no” need to collectively let Apple know how important this is.  We need more than just a poll.

Maybe it’s time to read Zittrain’s The Future of the Internet again.

Mozilla leader worries about Internet limits

Here is another great example of what I have called the application of mass communication to the law to the public. I see Baker arguing that laws governing how service providers structure internet access — especially rules regulating what users can do with that access.

Mitchell Baker said she worried about “the increase in laws that make it difficult to run an open network,” especially rules about content.

“You suddenly become liable for anything that gets downloaded, whether it’s legal or not,” she said. “If you said to a municipality, if you build a road, you have to guarantee nothing illegal happens on it – that’s what’s happening on the Internet now. So that’s the kind of regulatory disruption that’s going to have some long-term consequences.”

Edit: In reading it again, I’ll revise my original statement. Baker’s intent wasn’t exactly to address the application of media law to the public. Yet, his analogy might get there by extension. If you’re not regulating the road builders, you must be policing users.

via Mozilla leader worries about Internet limits – washingtonpost.com.