The silly thing about this is, of course, that the intel version of OS X has already been hacked, without the help of Apple-published kernel code.
Hmmm, I guess don't quite see the logic here. The current versions have been hacked but not future versions. If something is added to the kernel to protect the OS in a different way, then releasing future versions of the kernel as source would likely help pirates.
by Scott Stevenson — Feb 24
Hmmm, I guess don't quite see the logic here. The current versions have been hacked but not future versions. If something is added to the kernel to protect the OS in a different way, then releasing future versions of the kernel as source would likely help pirates.