Is there anyone left who hasn’t found out that the iPhone
can only bought with an AT&T two-year contract? I’m sure that there isn’t! But
just in case let me remind you. AT&T, the exclusive service provider for
iPhone offers three plans. The cheapest plan guarantees 450 anytime minutes
along with 5,000 nights and weekend minutes. The second one which costs $79.99
offers 900 anytime minutes and unlimited nights and weekends. The top-level $99
plan means 1350 anytime minutes and unlimited nights and weekends.
But what is that you might not already know is that from the
very moment iPhone was launched, it has become the target of some hackers very
determined to unlock it. More precisely, their goal was to transform the iPhone
into a mobile phone that would work with any mobile carrier. And it seems that after just two months they managed to
reach their goal.
Yesterday one of these hackers, a New Jersey teen George Hotz in collaboration
with four online colleagues, reached his goal successfully through an array of
procedures detailed on his blog.
The operation is fairly long, it involves some technical
knowledge and it’s not reachable for a beginner. The highest risk is to definitely
damage it during the “process”. The creative hacker placed the decoded
iPhone on eBay where it has already reached the $2000 price, compared to $499,
the official cost.
Hotz said unblocking the iPhone was the goal of an
unofficial competition among self-styled hackers and other technical types
following the highly hyped debut of the device.
But there is also a second unlocking solution provided by a
so-called iPhoneSimFree group and, as Engadget reported, is a software-only
unlock which frees the iPhone to work with SIM cards from any service provider.
For full details, please visit Engadget,
where there is also an explanatory video.
iPhoneSimFree is offering publications free unlocks as proof
of its accomplishment over the next 48 hours, an apparently plans a commercial
launch of its unlocking solution within the next week.
It seems like both hacks leave intact
the iPhone's many functions, including a built-in camera and the ability to
access Wi-Fi networks. The only thing that won't work is the "visual
voicemail" feature.
According to a report published last month by Gene Munster,
a Piper Jaffray analyst one of his reports, AT&T pays a fee to Apple for
each iPhone.
"While we do not know the exact details of the
agreement, we conservatively estimate that AT&T gives Apple $3 per month
(over the life of the 24 month contract) for every iPhone customer already with
AT&T and $11 per month for every new subscriber," lead analyst Gene
Munster.
Also in July AT&T announced the financial results for
the last quarter and it seems the iPhone was a huge success.
iPhone was launched on June 29 and in the last two days of
the month AT&T activated 146,000 of the phones. More than 40 per cent of
those users were new AT&T customers, the company said. The popularity of
the device helped AT&T increase its share in the mobile phone market by 1.5
million customers to 63.7 million, beating out competitor Verizon Wireless to
lead the sector. So a public method to unlock the iPhone could mean a potential
disaster for AT&T.
Now, my own dilemma is not whether the unlock process will
be made any easier or whether the procedure published by iPhoneSimFree is holding
water, but how much time will it take for the lawyers hired by AT&T and Apple
to sue the hackers and especially under which accusations.
In the past Apple always reacted extremely violently as many
times its products have been threatened to be modified by the hackers.
If you still remember, in past years an attempt to transform
the Mac OS X that was available only on Intel processors into an operating
system that would function on ordinary notebooks was handled very tough by
Apple. And if story slipped your attention, let me remember you that shortly
after the iPhone was announced, the Apple lawyers sent a “cease&desist” to
another creative guy who developed a mobile phone skin that imitated the iPhone
interface.
But this time it could be different. There is apparently no U.S. law
against unlocking cell phones because in 2006 the Library of Congress
specifically excluded cell-phone unlocking from coverage under the Digital
Millennium Copyright Act.
"The underlying activity sought to be performed by the
owner of the handset is to allow the handset to do what it was manufactured to
do—lawfully connect to any carrier," writes the government in explanation.
"This is a noninfringing activity by the user... The purpose of the software
lock appears to be limited to restricting the owner’s use of the mobile handset
to support a business model, rather than to protect access to a copyrighted
work itself."
On the moment Apple and AT&T didn’t show any reaction to
the “stunts” of Hotz or iPhoneSimFree, but is unlikely that Apple and AT&T will
tolerate a decoding iPhone solution to be disclosed on the Internet.
But what will be the concrete measures that will both the
companies take is still hardly to anticipate, however the hackers’ future doesn’t
seem too bright.
Meanwhile Apple is choosing its partners for the European
launch of the craved iPhone. According to the reports, iPhone will be offered by
O2 in the UK, Orange in France
and T-mobile in Germany.
And this leads us to another question. What impact will have
the news of unlock on the Apple’s negotiations with the European partners?