The Mercury News

Copyright case goes against Apple

Judge says Corellium ‘creates a new, virtual platform for iOS’

- By Susan Decker

Apple lost its copyright claims against a Florida company that makes “virtual iPhones” used by security researcher­s to test for vulnerabil­ities to its system.

Apple contended Corellium’s copied the operating system, graphical user interface and other aspects of the devices without permission.

It accused Corellium of acting under the guise of helping discover bugs in the iPhone’s operating system but then selling the informatio­n “on the open market to the highest bidder.”

Corellium’s actions fell under an exception to copyright law because it “creates a new, virtual platform for iOS and adds capabiliti­es not available on Apple’s iOS devices,” District Court Judge Rodney Smith in West Palm Beach ruled Tuesday.

Corellium has said its customers are government agencies, financial institutio­ns and security researcher­s.

It said Apple tried to hire the company’s founders and buy a predecesso­r of the firm and sued when the talks fell through.

“There is evidence in the record to support Corellium’s position that its product is intended for security research and, as Apple concedes, can be used for security research,” the judge said. “Further, Apple itself would have used the product for internal testing had it successful­ly acquired the company.”

The judge said that Corellium may still be in violation of the Digital Millennium Copyright Act, which prohibits tools to circumvent security measures, so declined to dismiss that aspect of the case.

Corellium’s virtual product used on a desktop computer can’t make phone calls, send text messages, access iTunes or do any of the other things an iPhone can.

The ruling was reported earlier by the Washington Post.

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