By - Michael Gowan
Category - Brochure Designers
Posted By - http://tinyurl.com/OnlineMarketingServices1
Brochure Designers |
The clock to unlock a new mobile phone is running out.
In October 2012, the Librarian of Congress, who determines exemptions
to a strict anti-hacking law called the Digital Millennium Copyright
Act (DMCA), decided that unlocking mobile phones would no longer be
allowed. But the librarian provided a 90-day window during which people
could still buy a phone and unlock it. That window closes on Jan. 26.
Unlocking a phone frees it from restrictions that keep the device
from working on more than one carrier's network, allowing it run on
other networks that use the same wireless standard. This can be useful
to international travelers who need their phones to work on different
networks. Other people just like the freedom of being able to switch
carriers as they please.
The new rule against unlocking phones won't be a problem for
everybody, though. For example, Verizon's iPhone 5 comes out of the box
already unlocked, and AT&T will unlock a phone once it is out of
contract.
You can also pay full-price for a phone, not the discounted price
that comes with a two-year service contract, to receive the device
unlocked from the get-go. Apple sells an unlocked iPhone 5 starting at
$649, and Google sells its Nexus 4 unlocked for $300.
Advocacy group the Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) questions
whether the DMCA has the right to determine who can unlock a phone. In
an email to TechNewsDaily, EFF attorney Mitch Stoltz said, "Arguably,
locking phone users into one carrier is not at all what the DMCA was meant to do. It's up to the courts to decide."
If you do buy a new phone and want to unlock it before the deadline,
you must first ask your carrier if the company will unlock your phone
for you. The DMCA only permits you to unlock your phone yourself once
you've asked your carrier first.
(Note that unlocking is different from "jailbreaking," which opens the phone up for running additional software and remains legal for smartphones.)
Christopher S. Reed from the U.S. Copyright Office noted in an email to TechNewsDaily that "only a consumer, who is also the owner of the copy of software on the handset under the law, may unlock the handset."
But come Saturday, you'll have to break the law to unlock your phone.
If you want to get in under the gun, you can search the Internet for
the code to enter to unlock the phone or find a tool that will help you
accomplish the task.
The change could crimp the style of carriers like T-Mobile, which
have pushed "bring your own device" as an incentive for switching
service providers. Such carriers promise savings in exchange for using
your existing phone on their network.
T-Mobile has promoted this notion for iPhones, in particular,
since the company is the only one of the big four U.S. carriers that
doesn't sell the iPhone. The carrier goes so far as to feature ads
displaying an open padlock, with an iPhone replacing the body of the
lock. T-Mobile declined to comment.
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