top | item 61017

If you care about your rights, don't buy an iPhone

12 points| jamiequint | 18 years ago |machinist.salon.com | reply

" Imagine the outrage if Apple or Microsoft sold desktop PCs that allowed you to connect to the Internet only through Comcast -- and then, if you tried to use Earthlink instead, the company would shut down your machine. Or what if Ford allowed you to drive your new Explorer only to Wal-Mart to buy your groceries; if you went instead to Whole Foods, a company official would come by and slash your tires."

9 comments

order
[+] cstejerean|18 years ago|reply
Here is my perspective as an iPhone owner. I'm not too familiar with the details of the unlocking process but as far as I can tell if you have third party apps running on your phone the phone will need to be re-activated after installing the update (as I thinkthe phone gets wiped in the process). It makes sense to me that since unlocking modified some internal state of the phone the re-activation might break. I don't think it's apple's job to resolve bugs baused by third party hackers. I'm not even sure this disabling is intentional.

The same thing applies to third party apps. Why should Apple go to the trouble to make sure the upgrade doesn't break third party apps? If you're brave enough to hack your phone you have to take certain risks. If you decide to unlock the phone then don't upgrade until someone figures out how to work around this.

And for all the complaining of locked phones, Apple had to make some deals with AT&T for the phone to work the way it does. AT&T had to upgrade it's EDGE network, it had to build support for visual voicemails and allow for users to activate their iPhones (and sign up for service using iTunes). I can only imagine all of these changes required a lot of money to implement and as such it doesn't sound unreasonable to ask for an exclusivity deal in return. If you want a phone that work internationally go buy a Blackberry (the blackberry is a much better phone in my opinion, the only thing the iPhone does much better, and the deciding factor for me, was the web browser).

[+] jamiequint|18 years ago|reply
"If a company tried this in any other industry, people would howl to the heavens. Imagine the outrage if Apple or Microsoft sold desktop PCs that allowed you to connect to the Internet only through Comcast -- and then, if you tried to use Earthlink instead, the company would shut down your machine. Or what if Ford allowed you to drive your new Explorer only to Wal-Mart to buy your groceries; if you went instead to Whole Foods, a company official would come by and slash your tires."
[+] palish|18 years ago|reply
Someone bulds a car that drives itself. Not only that, but it has an Ethernet port with broadband speeds. So whenever I drive to work in the morning, I can spend that half hour getting things done instead of zoning out in traffic (around 260 extra hours a year). Sounds like a worthwhile investment, yeah? Two catches though. You can only get your gas from your dealership, and your mobile broadband is from them too. If you try to get gas from a regular gas station, then your car will work but you can't take it in for maintenance anymore.

Here's the deal: I'd buy it anyway. The value it provides (saving time) far outweighs the restrictions. The iPhone has saved me a big chunk of time already. I was stuck in a traffic jam just yesterday, and the maps enabled me to navigate the back roads and get to a different highway. That probably saved me two hours. If my time is worth $100/hr (I'd pay $100 to live an extra hour) then the phone half paid for itself in one night. It saves time in other ways with pocket internet and pocket email. So if you don't like the restrictions, then there's a solution: don't buy it. :)

- Posted using an iPhone.