MobileMe Up, iTunes Down. As In, Locking Users Out
Aug-19-2008 3:13:31 AM [Christopher Price][Site Comments]

The latest iPhone update finally makes MobileMe work. But, many are still 
having issues with iTunes.

With iPhone 2.0.2, many have reported in (and we've confirmed as well) that 
MobileMe finally works as promised with iPhone and iPod touch. Contact, 
calendar, and mail data does download properly whenever you open any of 
these apps. And, unlike other versions, it actually does so quickly. We 
tested iPhone 3G on AT&T HSDPA, and MobileMe was able to download 500 
contacts, and 1500 calendar events. in under 30 seconds.

But, the bigger problem remains iTunes. Apple has begun to acknowledge that 
many iTunes users have been completely locked out of their purchased content 
from the iTunes Store. The bug surfaced in the latest version of iTunes, 
7.7.1, and appears to mostly be hitting Mac users. While Apple has not 
pinned down the problem internally, the bug essentially locks users out of 
being able to play any purchased, copy-protected content. That includes 
Music, Movies, TV Shows, and. the App Store.

The problem is what Apple refers to as an "authorization loop". This is 
essentially where the user is repeately asked to authorize (log in) their 
computer. When the user logs in to iTunes, the application reports success. 
but then asks the user to log in again. This repeats in an infinite loop. 
While other problems can cause this set of symptoms, this bug is not 
resolvable by the user. Apple's posted list of fixes for a reauthorization 
loop do not work with iTunes 7.7.1.

One of PhoneNews.com's own systems was affected by this problem. We 
performed a clean install of Mac OS X, iTunes, and built a new iTunes 
Library to no avail. The only workaround we came up with. was migrating the 
entire iTunes Library to another computer. A PC.

Apple has made no public statement about the bug, but individual users that 
contact iTunes Customer Service are told Apple is aware of the issue. 
However, the problem is serious enough that developers affected by the issue 
have been requested to hand over computer logs. This appears to indicate 
that Apple has yet to pinpoint the root cause of the problem. almost two 
weeks after it began affecting users.





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