Apple loses copyright claims in lawsuit against Corellium
Corellium, a mobile device company that supports iOS, this week won a significant victory in its legal battle against Apple. Apple last year sued Corellium for copyright infringement because the Corellium software is designed to replicate iOS to allow security researchers to locate bugs and security flaws.
According to The Washington Post, a Florida judge threw out Apple's claims that Corellium had violated copyright law with its software. The judge said that Corellium successfully demonstrated that it operates under fair use terms.
A very unlikely victory, considering the massive financial means difference between these two companies. A good one, though - this was just the world's largest corporation being annoyed a small upstart made their products look bad by giving security researchers the tools they need to find bugs and security flaws in iOS.
Being annoyed your forced Uighur-labour brand might get tarnished should not be grounds for a legal case.