N
Nicolas S
When you program a J2ME midlet for a mobile phone and you don't want it
to bother you asking for permissions, you need to sign it with a 'code
signing certificate'. The certification authority must be trust by your
phone, so you cannot self-sign the midlet, and it seems to be
[impossible/very hard] to add your own certificate to the phone.
Such a certificate costs about $200. (Thawte for example). That's a lot
of money just for writing or testing non commercial applications.
I'm thinking about creating a little corporation to buy a certificate,
the price would be splitted by the number of members and each member
could then use the certificate as he wants to.
What do you think about the idea? let me know if you would be
interested to participate....
(e-mail address removed)
to bother you asking for permissions, you need to sign it with a 'code
signing certificate'. The certification authority must be trust by your
phone, so you cannot self-sign the midlet, and it seems to be
[impossible/very hard] to add your own certificate to the phone.
Such a certificate costs about $200. (Thawte for example). That's a lot
of money just for writing or testing non commercial applications.
I'm thinking about creating a little corporation to buy a certificate,
the price would be splitted by the number of members and each member
could then use the certificate as he wants to.
What do you think about the idea? let me know if you would be
interested to participate....
(e-mail address removed)