Apr 17

RIM Not Dropping Side-Loading for BlackBerry ...

Research in Motion raised a few eyebrows recently when a tweet from the firm’s vice president of developer relations suggested that RIM would stop allowing Android apps to be sideloaded onto the BlackBerry PlayBook due to piracy concerns.

“Piracy is a huge problem for Android devs, and we don’t want to duplicate the chaotic cesspool of Android market,” RIM’s Alec Saunders tweeted last week.

In a Tuesday blog post that sought to clarify his position (“140 characters doesn’t allow for nuance,” he wrote), Saunders denied that RIM would get rid of side-loading for the BlackBerry PlayBook OS or in BlackBerry 10. Side-loading allows for the installation of apps without a dedicated app store.

“Side-loading on our platform is changing in nature. Side-loading is a developer feature. it exists so that developers can load their apps onto their own devices to test,” he wrote. “It’s there so developers can send a beta release to their testing community for review. it is definitely not there for some people to side load a pirated app.”

With the release of BlackBerry PlayBook OS, RIM will include “a feature that will encrypt apps so they can only be run by the user who purchased the app,” Saunders said.

Saunders did not specifically mention the Android platform in his blog post.

In March 2011, RIM said the PlayBook would run Android and native apps in addition to apps developed for the BlackBerry platform. The idea from a developer perspective was to give them an opportunity to try things out on the PlayBook so they’ll perhaps opt for a PlayBook-specific version in the future.

Saunders and Marty Mallick, vice president of global alliances and business development at RIM, discussed the Android side-loading issue during a roundtable at February’s Mobile World Congress. one phenomenon RIM didn’t expect was people submitting Android apps that weren’t their own. one app, Mallick said, was submitted 10 times – but none of those submissions were from the owner.

“There’s a surprising amount of piracy” with the Android apps, Mallick said at the time.

Android malware was big news in 2011. Unlike Apple, Google does not have a strict approval process in place for its Android Market, and while that might make for a more open environment, it also makes the store vulnerable to some dangerous apps.

To address this issue, Google in February added a new layer of security to the Android Market (now Google Play), dubbed Bouncer, that will scan apps for evidence of malware.

The effort will automatically scan new and existing apps as well as developer accounts, “without disrupting the user experience of Android Market or requiring developers to go through an application approval process,” Google’s vice president of engineering, Hiroshi Lockheimer, said at the time, in a nod to Apple’s App Store process.

On the RIM front, Saunders pledged to work with the developer community so they can “still quickly and easily test your apps on real hardware.” Attendees at BlackBerry 10 Jam will receive a prototype device on which developers can start building, he said.

For more from Chloe, follow her on Twitter @ChloeAlbanesius.

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RIM Not Dropping Side-Loading for BlackBerry PlayBook

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Apr 11

Is RIM Blocking Side-loading of Apps on the ...

First RIM roiled its shrinking universe of users and developers with a single tweet about ending side-loading of apps on its PlayBook tablet. And then the company created more confusion with a blog post this week that was supposed to give “nuance” to the tweet.

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And it’s still not clear whether RIM plans simply to block side-loading as it’s currently understood and practiced among PlayBook users, or to modify it and limit it. Side-loading, which is also an issue in other mobile platforms, is the ability to install applications outside of an official “app store,” in this case BlackBerry App World.

[Free Android Apps for BlackBerry PlayBook: 10 Best Downloads]

The confusion started during an April 4 exchange on Twitter between Alec Saunders (@asaunders), RIM’s vice president of developer relations, and a number of his followers. Mohamed Rizk (@Spy520e), a BlackBerry developer from Doha, Qatar, asked Saunders via tweet, “Heard you’re removing Side Loading from OS 2.1, that’s ok, but any workaround to test apps other than Simulator?”

BlackBerry developers use side-loading to install an app in development, test it and debug it, before submitting it to the online marketplace.

Saunders’ reply: “we’re removing side-loading for consumers. Pretty sure we’ve got a solution for devs.”

Replies started immediately. “please dear god no! re: no side-loading in future. I feel a hole is being filled w/ side-loading and is not even fully filled,” tweeted test @t35ttw1tt3r, adding in a second post: “unless the key app gap is filled I would beg to keep side-loading.”

“Removing side-loading would remove a lot of functionality my PB has,” tweeted ADavidson (@davidson25). “Kindle, Zynga games, Google maps, Soundcloud to mention a few.” ADavidson added later: “more than half the apps I use are sideloaded and there’s no sign of them in [BlackBerry] app world.”

In his follow-up tweets, Saunders said developers are pushing for an end to side-loading so their apps won’t be pirated. “We’ve got devs who refuse to work with us until it’s gone. Sorry guys.” And he pointed to the growing number of BlackBerry apps available at the online store: “like I said — working it. 25,000 new apps submitted last quarter. Our best developer quarter EVER.”

The comments quickly spilled over into other online forums, like this one at CrackBerry.com. A range of posters, identifying themselves as developers, were in agreement with Saunders’ evaluation.

“I never once heard them say that they were giving people the chance to sideload,” posted Flexin. “They were offering a Android player to make it easy for dev to port over apps. They can’t force people to do it. some did it, a lot didn’t. You’re taking it a step farther. That’s up to you but if they remove it they are not taking away anything they said they would give you. if the Android player is still there then they are still doing what they said [they would do].”

The Android player was introduced as part of PlayBook OS 2.0, released in February, intended to let PlayBook users download and run apps created for the Android OS. within a week, RIM claimed there were “thousands” of Android apps available. RIM is in the midst of a complex transition to a new operating system, BlackBerry 10, for both the PlayBook and the next generation of BlackBerry smartphones.

On April 10, Saunders took to a RIM blog to expand on his tweets and “set the record straight.” “Unfortunately, 140 characters doesn’t allow for nuance,” he posted. “I’d like to take this opportunity to set the record straight for our developer community.”

“We’re not getting rid of side-loading on the BlackBerry PlayBook OS or in BlackBerry 10,” he declared, more or less directly contradicting the tweet that started the confusion. “Side-loading on our platform is changing in nature.”

He stressed that side-loading is intended for software writers. “Side-loading is a developer feature. It exists so that developers can load their apps onto their own devices to test. It’s there so developers can send a beta release to their testing community for review. It is definitely not there for some people to side load a pirated app,” he wrote.

RIM BlackBerry PlayBook”What are we doing,” he asked rhetorically. “Starting with our next release of the BlackBerry PlayBook OS, we’re introducing a feature that will encrypt apps so they can only be run by the user who purchased the app.” he didn’t elaborate on the implications of such a feature.

“We’re working with you, our developer community, to ensure you can still quickly and easily test your apps on real hardware,” he posted. he reiterated RIM’s pledge to hand out prototype devices for developers, along with the first look at the official BlackBerry 10 native SDK tool at the upcoming “BlackBerry 10 Jam” event for developers at the annual BlackBerry World user conference in Orlando.

In response to a reporter’s query for clarification, RIM’s PR team provided a link to Saunders’ blog post.

At the CrackBerry forum, one poster, ad19, wrote in response, “Looks like side-loading is here to stay, but in a modified version. if implemented correctly, I think this should work just fine.”

“I’m cautiously optimistic on this,” agreed another, with the handle of TBone4eva. “It means that RIM is saying that [they] are only protecting apps from being pirated from App World, but not disabling development mode completely by encrypting the App World apps so they can’t be sideloaded. I think that is completely fair.”

But another user, BuzzStarField, posted: “Note also that there is already a method available to ‘side-load’ unsigned apps to PB so that we can test them. this method uses a type of temporary authorization known as ‘debug tokens’. – and this method is much more efficient than loading signed apps. we do not know how RIM is going to allow us to distribute signed apps for beta testing or even if they will.”

“Speculation is futile and may or may not involve side-loading or it may or may not include App World enhancements,” he continued. “Or it may be something else. Don’t speculate and you won’t be disappointed. Developers worry about these things – consumers should not.”

John Cox covers wireless networking and mobile computing for Network World. Twitter: http://twitter.com/johnwcoxnww Email: john_cox@nww.com Blog RSS feed: http://www.networkworld.com/community/blog/2989/feed

Read more about anti-malware in Network World’s Anti-malware section.

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