Beeper Mini users find Macs banned from iMessage network

Posted:
in macOS

Beeper mini users who used their hardware to register their app with Apple's iMessage network may find their Mac blocked from the service instead, in what could be retaliation against the use of the controversial messaging app.

Beeper Mini
Beeper Mini



Following a cat-and-mouse race between Beeper and Apple to get around Apple's security and allow Android device users to post to the iMessage network, it seems that some are finding out that they've got bigger problems with their own overall access to iMessage.

In December, one of the last fixes for access offered by Beeper was a method of using a real Mac to connect to iMessage, and use that registration with Beeper Cloud and Beeper mini. The logic worked, with the genuine registration data sourced from the user's own hardware, or a Mac they had access to, allowing access.

However, not all is rosy for users, if the Beeper subreddit is to be believed. A number of posts claim that Apple is banning Macs from being able to make iMessage posts at all.

It appears that Apple may be detecting the instances of registrations being used by Beeper, and then striking the registration's access from iMessage. The problem is that doing so also blocks the legitimate original source of the registration too, as well as any other devices that use the same registration data.

At the time of the method's introduction, Beeper said that testing revealed up to 20 users could "safely" use the same registration data.

While affected users can only contact Apple support in a bid to restore access, Beeper doesn't seem to be continuing the fight with Apple. In a blog post from December 21, the company admits it "can't win a cat-and-mouse game with the largest company on earth."

With no plans at the time of writing to respond if Beeper's system was knocked offline, the blog adds that the company would return to the long-term goal of "building the best chat app on earth" in the new year.

BGR also reports that Beeper Mini has been removed from the Google Play Store, though seemingly momentarily. Beeper is said to be focusing on adding other chat networks to the app, and preparing for a relaunch.



Read on AppleInsider

Comments

  • Reply 1 of 16
    Banning real Macs from iMessage, sounds like it could be a legal issue. Specially if they were sold with one of the main features being access to iMessage
    williamlondon
  • Reply 2 of 16
    ... is this yet another strike in the box for Apple trying to monetize everything Steve Jobs left behind, entrusted to Tim Apple since 2013, at the expense of the customer... ?

    ... to be fair it is Apple's sandbox to do what they please ...

    ... how is this a computer for the rest of us, if we are referencing 'core values' ...?   Where has all the aspirational rhetoric faded to anyway ...?

    My macOS haven't worked properly (esp sync) since High Sierra ...

    I am reminded of the book titled 'Too much and never enough', although it is technically the corporate job description...
    elijahgwilliamlondon
  • Reply 3 of 16
    rob53rob53 Posts: 3,276member
    Both of you are wrong. Beeper is hacking a Mac to get access. This is blatantly against Apple’s EULA agreement. People need to quit giving hackers a reason to have any product. 
    danoxmagman1979williamlondonchasmwatto_cobratdknox
  • Reply 4 of 16
    elijahgelijahg Posts: 2,805member
    rob53 said:
    Both of you are wrong. Beeper is hacking a Mac to get access. This is blatantly against Apple’s EULA agreement. People need to quit giving hackers a reason to have any product. 
    You can put anything you like in an EULA. Doesn't necessarily make it legally binding nor enforceable. 
    edited January 14 beowulfschmidt
  • Reply 5 of 16
    danoxdanox Posts: 3,155member
    elijahg said:
    rob53 said:
    Both of you are wrong. Beeper is hacking a Mac to get access. This is blatantly against Apple’s EULA agreement. People need to quit giving hackers a reason to have any product. 
    You can put anything you like in an EULA. Doesn't necessarily make it legally binding nor enforceable. 

    It's enforceable try to explain to a judge in court, how your Mac registration number ended up on 20 different (registrations) accounts from around the world. And the EULA in your possession says you can't do that. Also note if/when you tell the judge you don't have/own that Mac computer then you are doubly F__ked.....In short you have no leg to stand on. I think Apple can sleep at night.
    magman1979timpetuswilliamlondonwatto_cobratdknox
  • Reply 6 of 16
    danox said:
    elijahg said:
    rob53 said:
    Both of you are wrong. Beeper is hacking a Mac to get access. This is blatantly against Apple’s EULA agreement. People need to quit giving hackers a reason to have any product. 
    You can put anything you like in an EULA. Doesn't necessarily make it legally binding nor enforceable. 

    It's enforceable try to explain to a judge in court, how your Mac registration number ended up on 20 different (registrations) accounts from around the world. And the EULA in your possession says you can't do that. Also note if/when you tell the judge you don't have/own that Mac computer then you are doubly F__ked.....In short you have no leg to stand on. I think Apple can sleep at night.
    Terms in “contracts of adhesion” get thrown out by courts all the time.
    williamlondongatorguyelijahg
  • Reply 7 of 16
    Does the block apply to the hardware or the user’s Apple ID? If it is tied to the hardware then anyone who buys that Mac secondhand won’t be able to use the service.
    williamlondonwatto_cobra
  • Reply 8 of 16
    I'm worried about whether my personal Hackintosh'es will make it through this.
  • Reply 9 of 16
    rob53 said:
    Both of you are wrong. Beeper is hacking a Mac to get access. This is blatantly against Apple’s EULA agreement. People need to quit giving hackers a reason to have any product. 
    Beeper requires an actual Mac now so that they are no longer using their own fleet of Macs to provide registration info. If Apple isn't happy with someone using an ACTUAL Mac so that they can use iMessage on their device, I don't think that gives them the right to ban it outright 
    williamlondonelijahg
  • Reply 10 of 16
    Beeper should give up, Apple is not going to budge on iMessage it is even more important to them than Safari or even Apple Maps.

    That being said, everyone knows why Apple is doing this and its implications on the broader market (hint- it's neither about privacy nor security) the question is whether it is legal. If what happened to AOL messenger is any indication, it is not.
    williamlondonelijahg
  • Reply 11 of 16
    Apple is well within its rights and probably even justified in doing this (if they are) to discourage future cases like this. But now that Beeper has given up and seemingly everyone's got the message May be its time to deescalate. I mean the Mac owners are legit Apple customers even if not iPhone customers...
    williamlondonwatto_cobratdknox
  • Reply 12 of 16
    rob53 said:
    Both of you are wrong. Beeper is hacking a Mac to get access. This is blatantly against Apple’s EULA agreement. People need to quit giving hackers a reason to have any product. 
    ... could Apple just support the app and concept in the interest of its paying customers ...?
    williamlondon
  • Reply 13 of 16
    rob53 said:
    Beeper is hacking a Mac to get access. This is blatantly against Apple’s EULA agreement. People need to quit giving hackers a reason to have any product. 
    Obviously wrong. An authorized user of the Mac uses his own credentials. Duh. And who cares what some "policy" says? Grow a nut and think for yourself.
    williamlondonelijahg
  • Reply 14 of 16
    bobolicious said:

     ... could Apple just support the app and concept in the interest of its paying customers ...?
    Most people using Beeper Mini are Android users so therefore not paying customers. Those who do own a Mac are in breach of the EULA for their Apple IDs being used in ways to “hack” the iMessage network.  With that Apple has absolutely no obligation to support the app, the concept or those who use their Apple IDs in breach of their EULA. Their Macs are still fully functional, their Apple IDs still allow them to do everything except access iMessage. 

    This is exactly the same as Nintendo not supporting homebrew, or banning people/consoles from using their services. The console is still functional to play physical games, but they can’t buy/download a digital game or play their friends online, because they breached their EULA.  
    watto_cobratdknox
  • Reply 15 of 16
    bobolicious said:

     ... could Apple just support the app and concept in the interest of its paying customers ...?
    Most people using Beeper Mini are Android users so therefore not paying customers. Those who do own a Mac are in breach of the EULA for their Apple IDs being used in ways to “hack” the iMessage network.  With that Apple has absolutely no obligation to support the app, the concept or those who use their Apple IDs in breach of their EULA. Their Macs are still fully functional, their Apple IDs still allow them to do everything except access iMessage. 

    This is exactly the same as Nintendo not supporting homebrew, or banning people/consoles from using their services. The console is still functional to play physical games, but they can’t buy/download a digital game or play their friends online, because they breached their EULA.  
    EULA depends upon whether the courts allows Apple to screw over Mac owners because Apple fears that they would lose ecosystem lock-in.
    williamlondonelijahg
  • Reply 16 of 16
    1348513485 Posts: 362member
    Terms in “contracts of adhesion” get thrown out by courts all the time.

    Contracts of Adhesion are when one party presents the document with specific terms that the second party had no opportunity to negotiate, such as a lease agreement, insurance policy, or mortgage agreement. Or in this case, a EULA. 

    But the Apple EULA is a "click-wrap" type of adhesion contract (you click on "I Agree"), and these are usually enforceable.

    Broadly speaking, the terms in question would have to be unreasonable and unconscionable to be tossed. When you say they get tossed "all the time", true, but it's probably more accurate to say once in a while.
    williamlondonwatto_cobra
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