arstechnica.com — As of late 2006, cell phone unlocking became legal in the US, but don't tell that to AT&T; the company has unleashed the lawhounds on UniquePhones, a Belfast-based company that claims to have developed a software-only method to unlock the iPhone.
Aug 28, 2007 View in Crawl 4
pintomp3Aug 29, 2007
correct me if i'm wrong, but drug busts seem to always be about possession and/or distribution, not consumption. seems like the same idiocy.
locojonesAug 29, 2007
AT&T will not lose. THe DMCA is on their side.
Closed AccountAug 29, 2007
The DMCA is irrelevant, you iPhone "people" have entered into a binding contract of exclusivity.That being the case AT&T has every right to block you and anyone else from such activities.You knew this going in, quit being spoiled brats and honor your agreement, preferably in silence.
xtopherousAug 29, 2007
Does anyone have a copy of the contract that the iPhone people allegedly entered into (knowingly or not)?
tkn00bAug 29, 2007
Thems fightin' werds round these parts boy.
sirbotchnessAug 29, 2007
keep on supporting AT&T by buying a 600 dollar phone.
codered1322Aug 29, 2007
1 - It's 2007. The rest of your points don't matter then.
harrygoazDec 12, 2007
In the story "iPhone is 'in a Completely Different League'", the review discusses option of going the official route or "picking one up in the US, like I did". I guess Apple is more interested in selling phones than they are worried about phone hackers.<a class="user" href="http://www.reviewsofcellphones.com/samsung">http://www.reviewsofcellphones.com/samsung</a>