Forgive my noobness if this sounds stupid but was looking at the company apps setting on my Lumia 928 and was wondering if it could be exploited in anyway as far as sideloading homebrew? Out of curiosity, not that I expected it to work, I emailed myself a .xap file and got an error saying there was something wrong with my company app and to contact the company's support person. So went to company app settings and it asks for email,password, username,domain, and server but does it actually check the authenticity of the domain and/or server for a legitimate company or could someone simply set up a server hosting .xap files to be downloaded simply by registering and logging in with these settings? Even wondered if I simply used this info from the email server if it would install through email but seems too simple and haven't messed with it.
this would work, but theres a lot you have to do to set it up:
There are some general steps that companies must follow to establish a company account, enroll devices, and distribute apps to their enrolled devices. The following sections provide an overview of this process:
1. The company registers a company account on Windows Phone Dev Center and acquires an enterprise certificate from Symantec.
2.The company creates an application enrollment token (AET).
3.The company develops a Company Hub app.
4.The company prepares their apps for distribution.
5. Employees (or other users) enroll for company app distribution on their phones and install the company apps by using the Company Hub app.
you have to use intune director. Companys have to register with windows phone dev and aquire an enterprise cert. This *could* be a way to install homebrew apps, but it'd be easier if there was some kind of workaround.
more info here..
http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/windowsphone/develop/jj206943(v=vs.105).aspx