This is not legal advice. It is my humble and often incorrect opinion:
First of all, violating this clause in the Apple agreement isn't breaking the law - it is breaking your agreement with Apple. No criminal court in the USA can pursue a violation of this clause.
Apple could sue you in civil court for failure to abide by the license that you (evidently) agreed to. But it seems quite unthinkable that Apple would pursue a violation of this particular clause - as it is fairly clear that the clause was not part of their intention.
I wouldn't worry about it. It would be a huge, laughable political error if Apple were to pursue a violation of this clause of the Safari for Windows license.
Nope
This is not legal advice. It is my humble and often incorrect opinion:
First of all, violating this clause in the Apple agreement isn't breaking the law - it is breaking your agreement with Apple. No criminal court in the USA can pursue a violation of this clause.
Apple could sue you in civil court for failure to abide by the license that you (evidently) agreed to. But it seems quite unthinkable that Apple would pursue a violation of this particular clause - as it is fairly clear that the clause was not part of their intention.
I wouldn't worry about it. It would be a huge, laughable political error if Apple were to pursue a violation of this clause of the Safari for Windows license.