Which is weird if you think about it. If I buy a car, give it a paint job, mount some LEDs, and a new sound system, I'm totally within my rights to sell it. I can't say that I'm Ford or Honda when selling this modified car, but I'm totally allowed to sell it.
Yes, and this analogy is even more valid than usual, because unlike most software where each binary is an exact copy of all the others, in this case each binary is actually unique to a device.
But it's more like a ticket, or an NFT. It's a unique blob that was sold to you. You should be able to transfer it.
Apple's best argument here might be that the blob is meant for one person, and distributing it this way is like sharing a ticket to the cinema between multiple people. I can't enter the cinema, then come outside and pass you the ticket so you can enter it too.
In that case the easy way out (and what plenty of Hackintosh/console hacking/emulation/etc. communities have done since the beginning of time) is to just download the file directly from Apple when the app starts up the first time or have an “import BOOT.bin here” button you use to activate the app. If someone can source the binary you need to get the app to work I think that’s DMCA legal.
It’s legal for Apple to distribute Apple binaries. It is not legal for someone else to distribute Apple binaries.
Copying a binary from installer to app folder: not distribution
Putting the binary on a USB and giving it to your buddy: gray area, not worth prosecuting, but maybe technically distribution
Uploading the binary to a GitHub repo titled “Apple binaries here”: obviously distribution