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by popalchemist 587 days ago
But, why?
3 comments

A dockerized Mac OS lets you perform automated testing without paying for the hardware, which is what you usually have to do.
Which in the countries where EULA's have a legal value, it is considered a crime, as Mac OS can only be virtualised in Apple hardware.
Creating a separate comment for this idea, but would virtualizing other versions of MacOS/iOS on say a Mac Mini so you can do multiple versions (And maybe iOS, by extension) and such in parallel would ostensibly be legal As long as you're running Asahi Linux as your Host OS
Can you expand on that? Why does it have to be a mac Mini? And why the asahi distro?

Sorry just genuinely curious and dont know myself

> Why does it have to be a mac Mini?

The mini is usually cost competitive as an entry Mac, and one doesn't need a fancy screen to drive up the price

> And why the asahi distro?

Well, in the context of this specific repo, one needs docker which needs Linux but generic Linux on Mac hardware can be iffy about having all the hardware working. I've never tried Asashi in order to speak to it but I believe that's one of their goals

Honest question, what happens if you set up a VPS in a country where EULA's don't? You get all the benefits and none of the repercusion, yes?
That is up for a judge, and legal agreements between countries, to decide upon.
Something being illegal doesn't always mean it's a crime.
That is exactly the definition, which you can happily discuss during a court hearing session.
It's not, at least where I live (Portugal). For example, drinking and driving is a "contra-ordenação" up until 1.2g/L, where it becomes a crime. Same with many other things.

Possession and consumption of illegal drugs was also decriminalized, but it's still illegal (just not a crime).

Not all legal systems are the same.

Whats the punishment?
Whatever the respective jurisdiction judge decides breaking an EULA with illegal deployment should be.

As some though for thought, https://www.quora.com/What-happens-if-a-EULA-is-violated

Why not?
Test on Safari for one?