Copy protection has always been a concern inside the Android Market, primarily because applications is additionally sideloaded onto phones without a root or other modification from the top user. In a short announcement made today, Eric Chu has made clear that a new method for shielding the work of paid app creators can be implemented long-term, with the plan being to \” replace the current Android Market copy-protection mechanism over the following few months.\” This new \” licensing service\” is accessible now for people that want in, providing developers with a secure mechanism which can ping a Market License Server upon launch to be able to see if a specific app was indeed purchased legitimately. It\’s hard to assert how exactly this can affect usability (specifically in offline scenarios), nevertheless it\’s certainly a fascinating twist to the complete situation. Expect to hear a whole lot of growling on each side as increasingly apps prefer to take advantage.
[Thanks, Jonathan]

The Engadget Interview: BlackBerry PlayBook product manager Michael Clewley
Mozilla rumored to debut LG-made Boot to Gecko device at MWC



