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This is a pretty good example proving Jason's point from a few days back. If something like this was found on a Microsoft Product, it would be front page news, every internet site would be screaming about it, and there would probably be a congressional investigation. But since it's Apple, we mostly have people saying it's to "protect" us from malware, which is total crap. It would appear to enable them to kill applications that you legally bought. If was truly to protect from malware, the same functionality could be provided in an opt-in basis, giving users the right to decide if Apple can verify their applications as "good".
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