Today in Apple history: Pirate app service Hackulous shuts down

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Hackulous icon
At one time, Hackulous aspired to be a Napster for pirated apps.
Photo: Hackulous

December 31: Today in Apple history: Pirate app service Hackulous shuts down December 31, 2012: App piracy hub Hackulous shuts down, bringing an end to two of its most popular apps, Installous and AppSync.

The iPhone jailbreak tool Installous allowed users to install “cracked” or pirated apps on their iOS devices, thereby avoiding paying purchase fees to Apple or developers.

Hackulous shuts down

After the shutdown, a message on the Hackulous website read as follows:

“Goodnight, sweet prince.

We are very sad to announce that Hackulous is shutting down. After many years, our community has become stagnant and our forums are a bit of a ghost town. It has become difficult to keep them online and well-moderated, despite the devotion of our staff. We’re incredibly thankful for the support we’ve had over the years and hope that new, greater communities blossom out of our absence.

With lots of love,
Hackulous Team”

Beginning of the end for iOS jailbreaking

Hackulous shutdown: For a while, this was the Napster for cracked apps.
For a while, Hackulous was the Napster for “cracked” apps.
Photo: Hackulous

In some ways, the death of Hackulous marked the beginning of the end for iOS jailbreaking. It represented a decline in the popularity of jailbreaking from which the community never recovered.

Before the App Store debuted in 2008, jailbreaking was a popular activity. It gave users the ability to install third-party apps on their iPhones at a time when Apple didn’t allow it. When the App Store arrived, some members of the jailbreak community used Hackulous to download pirated apps. It worked much like Napster, which offered pirated music downloads a few years earlier.

The piracy problem proved a daunting one for some developers. For instance, in December 2012 — the same month Hackulous shut down — developer Hunted Cow shuttered its multiplayer game Battle Dungeon after just a week. The reason? Piracy rates of roughly 90% made it impossible to afford to pay for the game’s server load.

Do you remember the iOS jailbreak era?

Do you remember the days of Hackulous? Were you ever a jailbreak proponent, or a developer in the early days of the App Store who struggled against piracy? Let us know in the comments below.

Source: iDownloadblog

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