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Siblings design pioneer marijuana application

By Virginia Kiddy

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Published: Sunday, May 31, 2009

Updated: Monday, June 1, 2009

iphone

Gregory Territo

When two siblings, David and Elizabeth Gregory, were laid off from their jobs in January, they used their free time to create an iPhone application focusing on the legalization of marijuana.

CHRONIC-les was released for sale May 21 and has had more than 1,000 downloads, ranking it at number seven under the Lifestyle section in the iTunes App Store.

The app features the laws and consequences for possession in each state, facts and figures supporting why marijuana should be legal and a pre-written letter to President Obama that can be sent by pushing a button, described by David as “petition on the go.” It can also locate the nearest NORML chapter.

Elizabeth, 26, is an applied sociology graduate student. She finished her undergraduate degree in marketing in 2005. David, 24, took classes at UCF but has been taking time off to work. Neither of them had any programming experience, so they borrowed library books and taught themselves. David does the programming and Elizabeth writes the content.

The siblings have plans in the works to create other applications, which they could not disclose. Elizabeth said some of them will be free, “to give back to people.”

Central Florida Future: When did you guys first come up with the idea, and how?
David: We thought, well, there’s no application to promote the legalization of marijuana. And that’s, like, one of the big things, being the first type of application in a specific genre. There’s no political category, and there hasn’t been an application on marijuana. That sounds funny. It was just an idea that was floating around. I read an article about this 9-year-old that made a drawing application for an iPhone. So we’re like, man, if a 9-year-old can do it, anyone can.

CFF: How long did the programming part of it take you?
David: Including reading, it was about two months from when I got laid off to when it was submitted.

CFF: What’s the process like for actually getting your application sold on iTunes?
David: First you have to enroll into the iPhone developer program. You set up an account. You set up your tax and banking information. You pay your annual fee, and they provide you with the software to start developing. Basically, they give you the software, and really you can download it for free, and the only time you have to actually enroll and pay for the yearly program is once you’re ready to submit an application.

CFF: Did iTunes communicate with you back and forth at all?
David: Not at all. They don’t even really give contact information.
Elizabeth: But apparently if they deny it they give you a reason, because recently a few apps have been denied.
David: Which is actually a pretty big deal because there’s a lot of applications that have been denied. We developed it knowing beforehand that we weren’t going to be upset if they didn’t accept it. We were thinking, “Maybe. This is iffy. It’s kind of on a fine line where they might accept it.” Because they’re based in California, and it’s basically legal there, and Apple, I guess — in San Francisco — didn’t find it obscene or offensive.

CFF: What are the biggest challenges you’ve had so far?
David: Learning the programming language has been a little difficult, but it’s definitely been worth it.
Elizabeth: And sharing a Mac. We have to give it back and forth for him to do updates.
David: Right now she has my Dell laptop, and I have her Mac laptop. So that will probably be one of the first things we do is upgrade our equipment.

CFF: Would you consider this a business venture or an effort to support a cause?
Elizabeth: It’s a little of both, I think.
David: Yeah, it’s both. People say work at something you love and you’re passionate about. And we’re pretty passionate about getting marijuana legalized.
Elizabeth: And the other thing is, I don’t see how really you could spend all day and all night dedicated to something and not at least have your bills paid. So, we’re not trying to make a million dollars or anything, but if I could pay my rent that would be good.
David: Now that we see it’s accepted and we’ve been learning how to program, it would be nice to keep rolling out applications. I could see it being a career.

CFF: What has made you so passionate about marijuana being legalized?
Elizabeth: It just seems like it has been demonized for the wrong reasons. When you do historical research, you’ll find that a lot of it was fueled by racism in different countries, in different time periods. So it was made illegal for the wrong reasons, first of all. And secondly, when you think about alcohol and tobacco and the damage that does to society, and OxyCotin and all the other prescription drugs that are abused all the time, people OD and die on these drugs. And marijuana cannot kill you.

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25 comments

Melissa Saturino
Wed Jan 6 2010 17:25
This is really good. This is what needs to be done to legalize drugs, I dont understand how you can be arrested for marijuana when it is a herb. It just doesnt make any sence. I think everyone should join the fight to legalization. (=
Please download the Legalize it! app for the ipod touch. And take action, each vote is one more step closer to legalization.
Your name
Fri Jun 12 2009 13:12
i give it a 10 out of 10
Rick
Thu Jun 4 2009 21:05
Brilliant , gave up checking the Laws in Texas ~ what are they ?
BigHig
Wed Jun 3 2009 17:46
(WASHINGTON D.C.) - A new Zogby poll commissioned by the conservative-leaning O'Leary Report has found 52 percent voter support for treating marijuana as a legal, taxed, regulated substance.

The survey, published as a full-page ad in today's issue of the political newspaper The Hill, polled a sample of 3,937 voters weighted to match the 2008 presidential outcome -- 54 percent Obama voters and 46 percent McCain supporters.

BigHig
Wed Jun 3 2009 17:43
(WASHINGTON D.C.) - A new Zogby poll commissioned by the conservative-leaning O'Leary Report has found 52 percent voter support for treating marijuana as a legal, taxed, regulated substance.

The survey, published as a full-page ad in today's issue of the political newspaper The Hill, polled a sample of 3,937 voters weighted to match the 2008 presidential outcome -- 54 percent Obama voters and 46 percent McCain supporters.

BigHig
Wed Jun 3 2009 17:41
Censoring all 17 previous comments from this article !!! Nice !!!
Fernando
Wed Jun 3 2009 10:48
SB:

The irony of you calling proponents of marijuana decriminalization "tools" while writing that lengthy diatribe in passionate defense of the status quo is not lost on some of us.

Get Over It: "Get over it hippies, weed will never be legalized, that's all there is too it."

Of course it will. Maybe not in this decade, but as attitudes towards drugs change and younger people start to replace the current generation of politicians, it's only a matter of time. Oh, and btw, I'm not a "hippy." (What the hell are you, sixty-five?)

BigHig
Wed Jun 3 2009 02:14
(WASHINGTON D.C.) - A new Zogby poll commissioned by the conservative-leaning O'Leary Report has found 52 percent voter support for treating marijuana as a legal, taxed, regulated substance.

The survey, published as a full-page ad in today's issue of the political newspaper The Hill, polled a sample of 3,937 voters weighted to match the 2008 presidential outcome -- 54 percent Obama voters and 46 percent McCain supporters.

"This new survey continues the recent trend of strong and growing support for taxing and regulating marijuana and ending the disastrously failed policy of prohibition," said Rob Kampia, executive director of the Marijuana Policy Project in Washington, D.C.

BigHig
Wed Jun 3 2009 02:07
Hey, "Get Over It"

Ignorance is Bliss !!!!!

Get Over It
Tue Jun 2 2009 22:28
Look at all of these comments, just a bunch of trolls. An attorney? A history major? And then one person who seems to know a thing or two (besides how to use spell check).
Although he's being stereotypical, it's true, most of us don't want to see weed legalized. What Mexico does is what Mexico does, border patrol and customs agents wouldn't have jobs if it's really true that most of the drugs being smuggled in are weed. Let them keep fighting the people getting things into our country, it keeps them employed.

Get over it hippies, weed will never be legalized, that's all there is too it.

Bill C.
Tue Jun 2 2009 16:01
SB:

Do you really think there are that many people out there who really want to smoke pot but won't just because it's illegal? It's true that most of us don't smoke it, and that wouldn't change if it was legalized. There are plenty of good reasons not to smoke pot that will still exist if we legalize it. As it is, it is easy for people to get away with smoking pot and in the unlikely even they do get caught for most it just means a slap on the wrist. We are deterring precious few from smoking it with our laws. It is easy to get anywhere in this country, and it's actually pretty cheap, usually cheaper than beer on a per use basis.

I think we need to legalize it because in trying in vain to keep up the ban we are causing every problem caused by Alcohol Prohibition and then some. Organized crime are making many billions from marijuana every year. Our government says that even though Mexican cartels smuggle in and distribute most all the cocaine, meth and heroin used in this in this country, they make the lions share of their money from marijuana sales. More people use marijuana than all other illegal drugs combined. According to government estimates the marijuana supply in a year in this country is many thousands of tons compared to just a few hundred tons combined of all those other drugs I mentioned. The black market for drugs is mostly just a black market for marijuana. I think we can and should kill the black market for marijuana and shrink the black market for drugs and the drug trafficking organizations in to something much smaller and easier to contain.

As for their being no movement to legalize heroin, for lack of a better word, duh. Of course there is real movement to legalize drugs like heroin or meth. Some extreme Libertarians and few others would go that far, but there is no major movement to do this and there never will be because people understand how addictive and destructive these drugs are and really only a very tiny minority of our population use these drugs to begin with. According to data from the National Survey on Drug Use and Health, most American adults under 60 and now even under 65 have tried marijuana. Very few have tried a drug a drug like heroin. You'd be hard pressed to even find that drug in my town. I'm an attorney and I've handled more drug cases than I can count but the only heroin case I ever had was one where a couple of drug mules were caught passing through on the highway with a kilo of it. We never see heroin simple possession or delivery cases in my area. If we legalized it and sold in from a local store, most people would be smart enough to leave alone but a few would try it and pretty soon we'd have a small contingent of heroin addicts causing us lots of problems when now we have none. It wouldn't make much sense for us to legalize that drug, or drugs like meth or cocaine. But marijuana is so prevalent and so cheap that we really couldn't make it any easier for people to get. We're accomplishing nothing good with our marijuana laws, except making guys like me money. Instead we're doing far more harm than good.

Stacia
Tue Jun 2 2009 11:13
LOL, at Steve Jones- sounds like an applebuddy.
Steve Jones
Mon Jun 1 2009 20:21
Hey you "SB" SUCK BALLS!! I am sure thats what it stands for, just like every stoner is a birkenstocks wearing hippie. George Washington used the crop, so did Benjamin Franklin, BRO!! So stick that in your PIPE AND SMOKE IT!!!
End the Prohibition
Mon Jun 1 2009 19:01
@SB. What will it change if it succeeds in getting marijuana legalized? How about the end of the daily murders being committed by the Mexican drug cartels in order to secure their marijuana routes into the U.S.? That'd be a good thing.

But maybe you don't care about the 6,000 people who died at the hands of the cartels last year due to our marijuana prohibition? And maybe you don't care about the almost 3,000 people who've died equally brutal deaths for the same reason so far this year? I guess that'd be a reflection of the quality of your character wouldn't it.

For the rest of us, the end of the prohibition and the end of the cartel murders is a very important thing. Congratulations to these two young people for their hard work and commendable moral values!

SB
Mon Jun 1 2009 15:30
Tools. This is what you're passionate about? Why not spend two solid months trying to find a job to better yourselves and do something that pays more than just "the rent"?
It's so sad, I support people learning new things, anything really, but what's your end goal? Do you truly, in your heart of hearts, feel this iPhone app will change things? So let's say it's legalized, or decriminalized at least, then what? A whole bunch of stoners in Birkenstocks and beanies saying "dude" and "bro" and listening to Buffalo Soldier 87 times in a row. Do we really want a country full of potheads? The majority has spoken and you tokers are the minority, get over it. There is no greater good, there is nothing more than an alternative clothing material, an alternative treatment (not the only one) to Glaucoma, and what else really worth making a fuss over? How does it feel when someone outside of your social circle debunks all of the "facts" that you all so proudly stand on? It doesn't matter that there are a percentage of users who are successful, the majority of people don't use, and don't want to be around others who use it.
The worst part is, 90% of the time I am of the standpoint of "live and let live." But not with weed. Everything else, there's no major movement to legalize/decriminalized. Why? You don't see heroin addicts calling people who don't use and support it "close minded." We, the non-heroin using population, must be dumber since we don't abuse, right? You smokers are literally to force this movement upon the rest of us, and make us feel bad for not seeing your view. It's like the argument "hey, no one has died from it, it must be ok, correct?" has never been used. Wrong. Congrats on getting Apple to approve your app, you just made thousands of tokers happy, for about 30 minutes until they forget they read this.
Jon
Mon Jun 1 2009 12:47
Thank you for being so proactive, and for dedicating your efforts to the fight for legalization, you are an inspiration to many. I will be downloading this app today, what a great idea!
otakucode
Mon Jun 1 2009 12:05
I hope Apple doesn't ban your app. They have a consistent history of censoring apps once they get media exposure if it does not serve to enhance their "brand image." And with regards to the first comment here, I certainly hope you don't end up getting hired by some recruiter. I hope your efforts with the apps turn out well and you are able to do work you like without an employer, and without having to sacrifice 40 hours a week of your life to some inefficient organization that funnels all your productivity away from you and into the hands of exorbitantly paid executives. This is the real promise of the Internet, to change how people do business with one another and get rid of the idea that it is normal to give 40 hours of your life a week to someone else for very little return.
Your name
Mon Jun 1 2009 11:40
wow thats really cool. I should have tough of that .....darn it!
Norm L.
Mon Jun 1 2009 11:18
With this on your resumes now, y'all are going to be sought out by lots of recruiters from lots of companies! Great career building while on unemployment!!! Keep up the good work.
Tim
Sun May 31 2009 20:29
Thats great you two.We need more people like you so we can change the laws.keep it up.Matbe when it's legal you can make an app on where to get it






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