Government Makes "Jailbreaking" Smartphones Legal

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mrtonguetwista

$$ Deep Pockets $$
Feb 6, 2003
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Owners of iPhones and other smartphones are one step closer towards taking complete control of their gadgets, thanks to a new government ruling Monday on the practice of "jailbreaking."

This weekend has seen a flurry of activity about digital rights, but the biggest news dropped Monday morning, when the FCC announced that it had made the controversial practice of “jailbreaking” your iPhone — or any other cell phone — legal.

Jailbreaking — the practice of unlocking a phone (and particularly an iPhone) so it can be used on another network and/or run other applications than those approved by Apple — has technically been illegal for years. Most jailbroken phones are used on the U.S. T-Mobile network or on overseas carriers, or are used to run applications that Apple refuses to sell, such as Safari ad-blocking apps, alternate keyboard layouts, or programs that change the interface to the iPhone's SMS system and the way its icons are laid out.

While technically illegal, no one has been sued or prosecuted for the practice. (Apple does seriously frown on the practice, and jailbreaking your phone will still void your warranty.) It’s estimated that more than a million iPhone owners have jailbroken their handsets.

Apple fought hard against the legalization, arguing that jailbreaking was a form of copyright violation. The FCC disagreed, saying that jailbreaking merely enhanced the inter-operability of the phone, and was thus legitimate under fair-use rules
 
Aug 23, 2002
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Saw this earlier... The thing that sucks is that even though its now legal, its not illegal for apple to patch up the "security holes" that jailbreakers use. Nothing has changed except the legality of jailbreaking. Apple will continue patching the holes they find and making it harder and harder to find new ways to jailbreak. Not to mention the warranty can still be voided if you bring in a jailbroken Iphone if your a rookie and don't "reset" your phone.

The thing I'm really interested in is the unlock rule. They say now they have to allow you to unlock your phone after your contract is up. How is Apple going to stop that? IDK but they will find a way to circumvent this law in my opinion. I think this is a step in the right direction and will make it better for the customer for once and not think about the big company first.
 
Dec 4, 2004
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#13
^ yeah but its easy as hell to just restore the stock OS if you ever need to bring the phone in for repair...and not a trace left
 

Kon1

Sicc OG
May 17, 2002
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^^^yeah I fucked up and jailbroke, didn't restore and took it to the apple store to get a new one cuz my shit was fuckin up hard, and they were like FUUUUUUCK YEWWWWWW KON!
 
Dec 4, 2004
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#16
thats all you gotta do? didnt know that...hmm
i thought they knew because of some physical shit..i dunno shit about jailbreaking iphones
Yeah jailbreaking is all in the software, it doesn't change anything in the hardware that might break it. I thought the same as you for the longest and didn't start toying around with jail breaking until a year ago. All you do is hit restore in iTunes and it wipes out the jailbreak and brings your phone back to stock. It's super easy now, you download software like Spirit and hit one button and you're jailbroken
 

Defy

Cannabis Connoisseur
Jan 23, 2006
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#17
as soon as I got the iphone the first thing I did was jailbroke it. shit, I even bricked it once and still restored it, then re-jailbroke it. shit was lightweight easy.


I think this is good, if users purchase a product they should have sole control over the product that they now own.