The point I was making is I'm sure a huge international company such as Cellebrite (and others) will have done their legal due diligence before they start distributing their software.
Yes, I am also pretty sure they did. And evaluated what is the financial cost of being sued versus profits from taking the risk. That doesn’t imply much about legality, in particular in a completely different scenario.
Considering some parts of Android are actually open source, you may wish to do some homework.
I certainly must do some homework, if I didn’t know how including open source parts leads to the entire collection of works not being covered by copyright. /s
I'll also mention again, Copyright does not equal "not able to make copies of", because that's demonstrably false.
Yes, it does equal exactly that, unless you are licensed to make copies or your local law provides specific exceptions.
If you insist on using your example, in Australia, it's not illegal to download a movie, it's illegal to distribute it. If I make a copy of a DVD for my own use, that's not prohibited under law. But this is an entirely different discussion.
And so is in Poland. But can you explain to me, how does this exception is of relevance to the problem discussed here?
Before you respond: what’s the goal? Because I’m not going to xkcd 386 myself. I
responded to
DavidAlpha denial. In my view this slowly diverges from the initial subject. Of course this is permitted and natural on a forum, but I can’t be expected to provide responses when the talk becomes tangential.