Apple Sued Over iPhone Bricking
An anonymous reader writes "The week's debate over the iPhone 1.1.1 has finally resulted in legal action. InfoWeek reports that on Friday, California resident Timothy Smith sued Apple in a class-action case in Santa Clara County Superior court. The suit was filed by Damian Fernandez, the lawyer who's been soliciting plaintiffs all week for a case against Apple. The suit doesn't ask for a specific dollar amount, but seeks an injunction against Apple, which prevents it from selling the iPhone with any software lock. It also asks that Apple be enjoined from denying warranty service to users of unlocked iPhone, and from requiring iPhone users to get their phone service through AT&T."
I just can't wait for OfCOM to get their hands on Apple when the iPhone launches in the UK. I know I will be the first to complete a complaints for to them on the day of the release.
Maybe now I can get my Motorola C975 camera phone unlocked from the 3 network. They locked it, they can unlock the thing. Or give me a new phone that's a: similarly functional to the 975 and b: open to all networks. For no extra charge. And maybe some sort of credit compensation.
Operation Guillotine is in effect.
If you modify an embedded system in a non-vendor approved way and then install a vendor update and the update brakes cause you did something incompatible.... Then it's your fault, not the vendors...
While i agree that Apple should be forced to sell unlocked phones, modifying a product in a non-approved way DOES invalidate your waranty. Why should the vendor be held reliable if YOU break his software?
Look, this thing is totally safe! Built it myself, you know. You just press that button like this and then turn that lev
... and this will settle the matter once and for all.
I mean when you have to buy numerous formats of a song because you are not allowed to pirate what you buy, to yourself for use on another device.... then of course At&T iphone lockin is acceptable.... If you want to use a different carrier you need to use a different format/device.
Anticompetitive practices is the only thing to argue here, but if you bring in a bunch of other non-issues then you can make the case lose.
Caveat Emptor - let the buyer beware.
Honestly, Apple has not attempted to deceive anyone on this issue, and they make it clear that service is with AT&T only. If you don't want to be locked-in with AT&T, then don't buy an iPhone. Period. If you still must absolutely have a class-action lawsuit, then do it against the Steve Jobs backdating accounting scandal.
I sue Apple for representing apple slaughter in their logo.
Watch out Steve, my people are waiting for you behind every corner, complete with jugs of apple juice ready to fly in your direction.
Apple has great products. Which I want to pay for to own and to do with then whatever I am pleased to.
I say Apple should go down this time because they behave like bastards.
Having said that, I question the sanity of people rushing in to buy a USD500+ iPhone knowing it's blocked, relying on 3rd party software for unblocking and expect Apple to own up. It's not that you are deprived of essential things in life by NOT owning an iPhone.
I hadn't the slightest objection to his spending his time planning massacres for the bourgeoisie... (P.G. Wodehouse)
http://apple.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=07/09/30/2148211
This lawsuit is just absurd.
OK, so I'm with everyone else hoping that before long the practice of locking phones to specific networks gets outlawed, but in this particular case, Apple haven't done anything wrong.
They are only responsible for providing updates which work with their software as supplied, and not software and iPhones which have been hacked specifically against Apple's advice, to get them working on other networks.
If your phone gets bricked by an Apple update after you've unlocked it, then it's entirely you fault. No-one else's. You did something that you knew full well at the time you shouldn't have done, and let's face it, it's not a simple process, so there can be no possible claim that you didn't know the consequences of your actions, and if you didn't understand this process and the implications, then you're even more of a fool for doing it. You've learned valuable lesson here - don't mess with things you don't understand. You immediately voided your warranty, again something you were fully aware that you'd be doing, and began using it in a way it was never intended or designed to be used, so you're not entitled to support. And now you've came out of it looking like a cock. With no phone. You bloody idiot.
Is it? I think the current situation is as follows:
Do Apple users think they're different than everyone else? I guess that question is silly - of course they do ('think different' and all that). Well, looking at it now, perhaps this is more organized by the lawyer (does he use Apple products?) than the Apple users directly. I understand their frustration, but suing to have the phone unlocked from AT&T? OK, perhaps this will be a 'fight the good fight' and perhaps they'll actually win. Perhaps this is the only group that feels this passionately about the subject. But why not sue Blackberry for only allowing the Curve 8830 on the TMobile network? I want an 8830, but on AT&T. Should I buy it, sign up for TMobile, then sue RIM? Or TMobile? Or both? I guess I don't quite understand the notion of throwing these other extraneous issues in to the suit, unless they're hoping for *something* to stick.
creation science book
A legal victory in this area would be awesome, as it could free up a bunch of other "locked" products, reaching far beyond cell phones.
Automotive diagnostic tools, printer refills, and "the exclusive jet engine provider" found on the 737 and 787 are a form of technology lock.
And so I conclude that since legal action didn't seem to address all these other areas, it would seem that "cell phone lock in" would be legal unless the law gets changed.
I really see no true difference between using your iPhone (with a carrier OF YOUR CHOICE) and hooking your landline (with a carrier OF YOUR CHOICE) through your computer's modem so you can use a software phone and answering machine. Also, how is it any different from using your laptop with a cellular card (with a carrier OF YOUR CHOICE) to get internet connectivity on the go?
To my layman eyes, the law in this area seems ad hoc and gives special attention to handheld cellular devices. Fortunately, it seems likely that unlocking is legal. I seriously hope this case will be the first of many to push regulation of companies that maliciously sabotage their customers after they bought the product to maximize profit.
I'm currently a very satisfied Mac user (I'm writing this post from a 3 year old PowerBook G4 17" that still runs like a spotted assed ape) but these sorts of moves sour me on AAPL. I'll give them a few chances to mess up and be forgiven, but as a computer savvy person who's primary love of Apple is for how they've beautifully wrapped what's under the hood, I can just as easily go right back to Linux where I came from. After all, that's what I use on the desktop and in the server rack already. Why is it, just when Microsoft seems to have shot itself in the foot with Vista and controlling what users do with their hardware, that Apple jumps right of the cliff with them?
Apple bricking the phone is not illegal, nor should it be. When Apple sold the phone, they were crystal clear that its only supported use was with AT&T and Apple-approved apps. Those that disagree with the policy should not have bought the phone.
Now, if Apple was suing folks for unlocking the phone, that would have been something else (and certainly brings to the forefront debates on shrinkwrap, reverse engineering rights, etc.) but they have not. The proper response to this bricking is another hack, not a lawsuit.
Apple is also perfectly within their rights to not give warranty service to those that modded their phone. The Magnuson-Moss Act only provides protection to those whose aftermarket bits did not cause the phone to die. If these folks had not modded their phone, the update would not have killed it. The act was meant to protect those that say, bought ordinary aftermarket headphones... automatically denying warranty service for THAT would be a blatant violation of the Act. For folks that would avail themselves of the Act, even a liberal interpretation would mean they would have to prove that Apple's update deliberately disabled the phone. Given how many things that can go wrong with code updates, I would be surprised if Apple simply just did not test on an unlocked phone, and the process just happens to brick the thing. Apple probably bricked many legit phones during their testing process until they got the bugs worked out...
SirWired
If they FULLY win this suit... by which I mean apple has to RELEASE their phones unlocked that would mean that the large sum of money that (I'm sure) was paid to Apple to have the phone only be on their network in the first place would have been a waste...
would they owe that money back to AT&T? or is it just lost money since it's not "Apple's Fault"...
also after seeing this trial would any other company ever waste money paying to make a phone 'only available on their network'?
just some hypothetical questions...
oh... and... what if their were no hypothetical questions?
----------
Trying to fix or change something only guarantees and perpetuates it's existence
I wonder how Apple will sell their iPhone in Europe. It is forbidden by the European consumer laws to sell a phone where you force users to a certain provider. I'm really curious.
No matter what happens, they will always be there to defend Apple. They will find a good defense even in an extreme hypothetical case of a situation where an apple product suddenly flies, goes in your ass and fuck you with an uncontrollable urge till you bleed to death - and what will the fucking apple fanbois say about it -"See, it cures hernia."
Apple bricking the phone is not illegal, nor should it be. When Apple sold the phone, they were crystal clear that its only supported use was with AT&T and Apple-approved apps.
Yep. And when you break the deed restrictions on your house, the homeowners association is fully within their rights to burn it down, with or without you inside of it.
Or maybe you're confused about the difference between "not supporting" and "destroying".
... bricking?
Perhaps we can build a house with such bricks....
You believe that Apple's actions are OK, and maybe they are in the US. But that won't fly in Europe.
The GSM standard expressly provides for cross-vendor compatibility through simple SIM change, and unlocking of locked phones is entirely legal in most if not all European countries. In fact, it's a substantial business to provide unlocking services, and to sell ready-unlocked phones.
That doesn't mean that it's free (a cellphone service provider will charge you for unlocking, since it carries the risk for them that you might defect to a competitor if their service is bad). But it does mean that unlocking is supported.
If the accepted and legal position in the US is that providers are allowed to deny GSM service mobility by not offering unlocking and by bricking unlocked phones on purpose (allegedly), then those providers are about to face problems when they try to do the same thing in European jurisdictions.
"The question of whether machines can think is no more interesting than [] whether submarines can swim" - Dijkstra
It's pretty clear, Apple is the new Microsoft. They're so freaking successful that everybody figures they must be cheating. They're starting to leverage their proprietary assets. And they're becoming the company everybody loves to hate, just like MS in the '90's.
The difference is, Apple is making some f'ing awesome products, and people are falling over each other to buy them. Compare products: iPhone or Windows 98? Ever see somebody show off their Windows upgrade to a girl at a bar?
Some people just hate success. The fuss over locked iPhones has just taken this crowd to a new low of childishness. Where were you losers the last ten years when the practice became commonplace? Clue alert: Verizon sells Verizon-branded phones that.. surprise... only work on Verizon's network!!! OMG!!! Where's the outrage? Instead, the losers wait until there's a phone they actually want and suddenly discover a heretofore unknown principle to stand on.
Apple/ATT bundling (if it's even a bad thing) is a rich country's problem, and the whining over the iPhone is truly pathetic, like a rich girl who wanted a different color BMW for her birthday. This used to be a country that valued freedom, now people go whining to Big Brother to fix every little problem in their lives. Pathetic. At the rate we're going, in 100 years Americans will all be working on assembly lines making electronic doodahs for the wealthy Chinese.
If the software in the phone is in an unknown state, then don't allow the upgrade to run.
Apple obviously wanted to brick the phones. Just about every other upgrade i've ever run checks the bits it's upgrading to make sure it's good to go.
I voided the warranty on dozens of 128K and 512K Macs in my day, and I knew damned well that if I broke one, I was on my own. The warranty is contingent on certain terms. If the user breaches those terms and the device breaks, it's nobody's fault but his own.
-jcr
The only title of honor that a tyrant can grant is "Enemy of the State."
The software is LICENSED to you. You don't OWN it. You OWN the hardware. Without the licensed software you have an expensive paper weight, but when you start violating software license agreements your license can be terminated.
You have a license to use your car. If your license is terminated legally you can't drive. Now your car is a big hunk of metal since you can't go anywhere.
If your software license is terminated you can't use the software. Congratz you own an expensive paper weight, unless you can figure out how to run Linux on there.
It's not apples responsibility. I don't think this is good press for Apple.
I read the license agreement. Says you can't modify the software.
Apple was never any better than MS and I have no love for them, in fact, they are worse, they have always been worse, and the fact they are worse, is the reason Windows is Dominant today. Never forget, never ever forget the reason Dos prevailed, Lock in, and that lock in translated to one killer application: Doom. Doom, not Windows, created the x86 world we live in. Had Doom come out on Mac First, we would live in a Mac world.
Apple has always been the worst about lock-in. There were once some old variations of the Mac you could only plug in Mac approved speakers, microphones, printers, etc etc etc etc. EVERYTHING was proprietary. Well. This thing about Mac Computers being compatible with everything, is new. I don't trust Apple, I never have, I never will, I don't trust MS, I never have, I never will because MS is moving in the same direction Mac was in the mid 90s. "Approved" Speakers, Network cards that don't work, USB Peripherials that sit there and smile at you. The list goes on. I vote Linux.
So does that make this lawyer a "WAAAAAmbulance chaser"?
Apple bricking the phone is not illegal, nor should it be. When Apple sold the phone, they were crystal clear that its only supported use was with AT&T and Apple-approved apps.
To be fair they only became crystal clear about the bricking long after people have started patching their phones and several patch providers have been selling "mods" for weeks.
While I agree Apple will probably win a case that tries to prove Apple should support custom mods, still, many people would be discouraged from patching in the first place if they knew in advance.
As a proof to this is the frantic search for "unpatching" mods after Steve announced what will happen after the update.
Also let's not forget the PR effect of this lawsuit. Win or not, this, the 16-bit iMac screens, the deffective nano screens, the freezing Macs, the overheating MacBooks, and so on and so on: those pile together and may turn the tide against Apple.
Apple exists solely because of their solid cult-like fanbase. Should this fanbase turn against them, they're goners.
Given that there are at least 3 if not 4 different standards for cellphones in use in the US, and that only 2 carriers support
gsm (AT&T and T-Mobile) what good does unlocking the Iphone do. Both gsm providers have horrible customer service and in quite
a few places horrible cell service.
So unless you are planning on traveling a broad and willing to do without lots of the nifty features, what's the point ?
I must have missed the crucial part where the guy described Apple putting a gun to his head and forcing him to buy an iPhone.
What is with all of these people getting pissed and suing (or bitching about) Apple over the iPhone locking? You were a dumbass and voided your warranty. Now you're paying the consequences. End of story. Nobody is forcing you to buy an iPhone. If you don't like the terms and conditions, DON'T FUCKING BUY IT!
And when you break the deed restrictions on your house, the homeowners association is fully within their rights to burn it down, with or without you inside of it.
Well, if you break the deed restrictions on your house, the homeowners association usually can, and sometimes does, put a lien on your house for fines, which must be paid before you can sell it. In some states they can even force a sale.
If you mod your phone and it gets bricked, Apple makes you pay to replace it... not much difference.
SirWired
To be fair they only became crystal clear about the bricking long after people have started patching their phones and several patch providers have been selling "mods" for weeks. The first poster sounds a bit like he is saying that intentionalbricking would be legal. It most certainly is not. However, I assume that this happened unintentional, and in that case, Apple could only give a warning about this _after_ people had been unlocking their phones and Apple's firmware upgrade was finished and went into testing. Apple didn't anticipate the method for unlocking the iPhone (clearly, if they had known the method, then they would have prevented it from working in the first place), so they couldn't possibly know how this would interact with an upgrade that wasn't written yet.
quit posting like an idiot
1. apple did not brick the phones that had 3rd party applications installed. there are many, many people with app.tap whose phones work perfectly fine sans (french for without) those apps.
the phones in question had modified firmware. read up about it to see what the difference is.
2. i don't know anything about warranty laws, so i'll just keep my mouth shut. (write that one down)
If you want to bitch about the iPhone and Apple, bitch about legit things... no iPhone SDK, no "official" way to install useful 3rd party apps, lack of enterprise-support for the device, lack of "open" ringtones etc. Don't complain about things getting borked when you flash modified firmware.
I think what happened is that a lot of n00bs flashed their firmware without knowing what they were actually doing. Apple (or anyone else) should be under no obligation to dance around all deficiently modified firmware chips out there..
Does any mobo manufacturers replace CPUs because of wrong overclock settings?
If you don't know what AltaVista is (was), get off my lawn.
To all the apple fanboys in this thread :).
If I buy an iPhone, and proceed to insert it in my anus (say, I dont use the phone as directed) do they have the right to deny me my warranty if, say, the battery runs out too fast?
Woah, that would be expensive. Why go to all that trouble?
I'm sure that Apple has an iPhone emulator, with which they test these sorts of things.
File under 'M' for 'Manic ranting'
Wasn't it announced *ahead of time* that the upgrade would brick unlocked phones?
That sure sounds like premeditation to me.
Nah, that sounds more like them taking into account that if you do some unsupported random modification, then there is no way for them to know what you did. And if they don't know what you did, how is the testing process going to know what to test for? Private APIs are always going to be changing, since they don't need to take into account third-party applications are using them and if they are they shouldn't be.
If you hack something then you should accept the risks associated with it. Yes I believe Apple should be making the iPhone more open, but until it is anything you do which is not officially supported is at your own risk.
BTW Haven't a number of people come up with solutions to unbrick the iPhone?
Jumpstart the tartan drive.
Well, it seems to me that Apple could offer a service. If your iPhone is now a brick, maybe they'll engrave your name on it and epoxy it into a sculpture in a park in Silicon Valley somewhere, for a small fee. For a slightly larger fee they'll re-flash the firmware, assuming it's even possible to fix what's broke without opening the case of the phone. If you must open the case and replace a part to fix a bricked iPhone, then it's likely that the cost of repair would exceed the cost of a new device. It also seems that there is some potential liability to be borne by the supplier of the software and instructions for modifying the iPhone. If those fine people were not appropriately careful about warning their victims, uh, customers, the might see some hostility directed their way at some point by people who figure they were misled. They probably won't be sued, though, since they can't fix the underlying issue (locked phones and the broken cell phone industry) nor do they have a mountain of cash to covet.
By the way, when did they stop allowing idiots to post here? I hadn't noticed.
*ducks*
If you mod me down, I shall become more powerful than you could possibly imagine.
Wow, people are such pampered whiners these days!
Apple is not required to produce a product to YOUR specific needs and desires. As long as they make something that enough people want that the sales pay for the effort, then they are doing what they are supposed to do as a company... make money. Lots of people like the iPhone and have no problem with how it works. If you don't like the product they make, don't buy it.
If you hack into the product they make, against their recommendations, and that doesn't work out nicely for you, why not try something new like take personal responsibility for your decisions.... You chose to hack it, there were plenty of warnings out there that bad things could happen, it is your fault, not theirs. Grow up.
What is this, "I can do anything I feel like, if anything goes bad, it is someone else's fault, and I get to complain bitterly about how the world has wronged me!" crap! The world (and more specifically, Apple) doesn't owe you a thing. Get over yourself.
Warnings were given multiple times. Apple release a press release, posted a warning before your computer downloads the new software and then posted an aditional and seperate warning (completely seperate from the EULA) before you could CHOOSE to install the software.
Mobile phones are not the only ones using this tactic. VOIP providers are actually engaging in the same behavior in cases, when you take their offers of free/subsidized hardware generally of course and one is still free to go buy any VOIP compatible phone/adapter which is sold directly and use it on any carrier, having said that the same is the case with GSM compatible cell phones you are free to go out and buy unlocked GSM compatible cell phones if you wish.
Would be nice to see one thing change with mobile phones though, I would like to see more stores selling the devices which are available as handset only as such, and they are available nokia for instance will happily cell you a phone from their online store I believe, I can't think of a high street store near me that will sell you a handset as is though the problem here is the lack of the choice for those who want to walk into a store and buy a handset as is with mobiles, most computer stores sell unrestricted VOIP phones as hardware only so why not for mobile phones?
I need certainty that Apple will not one day disable my mac because I do not have a .mac account.
.mac. Surely you see that Apple would have ABSOLUTELY no grounds .mac.
There's a big difference in hacking the iPhone, knowing full-well it violated the warranty, and
buying a Mac and not using
legally or commercially to EVER require users to use
From a Happy iPhone user who considered installing my T-Mobile chip in my iPhone (just as I
did in my Blackberry), but soon recognized it made no sense (violated warranty, future updates
and full functionality)
What's past is NOT ALWAYS prologue for the future!
I dont see how Apple can lose this. When you bought the stupid phone, and got your service, you agreed to the limitations set forth by Apple. If you didnt like the license, you shouldnt have agreed to it.
Now, if they were to change the license along the way you can at least have a reason to complain, but come on, you idiots agreed to this upfront.
---- Booth was a patriot ----
Am I the only person who thinks that Apple probably does not mind this lawsuit? Apple doesn't seem like the company who would want to sell service tied to one provider anyway, they would either want to sell devices that work with any provider or provide the service themselves. They were likely forced to lock the phones as a condition of getting on anyone's network, and starting their own network is impossible until more spectrum gets auctioned off. I'll bet that Apple was counting on a reaction like this, and has a provision buried in their contract with AT&T that says if a court forces them to unlock the phones, they can do so without invalidating their access to the network and AT&T can't complain.
If you mod me down, I shall become more powerful than you could possibly imagine.
YOU signed a contract.
... 3 months later. What are YOU, two years old?
That contract said you wouldn't alter the software or hardware AND that you knew AT&T was the only wireless provider for the equipment.
Now YOU don't like that contract a mere
I suppose that after you bought your house, YOU also tried to have the builder relocate it so traffic wouldn't be as bad?
YOU ARE AN IDIOT. Contracts are binding. If you don't like them, then DON'T SIGN IT!
BTW, cell phones are not a "right" - nobody owes you the ability to have a cell phone.
iPhone is just for ATT consumers, plain and simple - just like lot of games are built only for playstation, or only for XBOX360. With that logic, Microsoft should be sued because they don't let you play Halo 3 on Windows 95.
I got bored and one site recommended filing a FCC complaint so I did, saying that they wouldn't unlock my phones after 90 days of service like their other phones.
I got a call from the office of the president for AT&T. Unfortunately I was downstairs celebrating my daughters birthday so haven't been able to talk to them to see what happens, but I was pretty dang surprised.
As a rock-in-roll Physicist once said, No matter where you go, there you are.
I'm actually quite the apple fan, which is exactly why I hope they get trounced in court over this. I feel that all these comments lately about Apple becoming the next Microsoft are a little exaggerated, but if Apple gets smacked and put back in their place by a judgment like this, it will stop the problem before it becomes too serious.
Send Apple a message: 'No, this isn't going to work.' and let them rethink their strategy.
Of course, it's too late for me. I already went with another option instead of the iPhone. Maybe next version.
I'm pretty sure that it's considered anti-competitive to lock your phone to one network only. I think you're specifically allowed to "hack" any device with such a carrier lock, and that is deemed an acceptable modification of software or hardware to do so.
The same issue has come up with mod chips for consoles. Here in Australia, mod chips were deemed legal when Sony lost their case in the supreme court - so long as the mod chip breaks the DVD region lock. I'm pretty sure I've heard similar things about phones and carriers in the US - you're allowed to modify them if the modification involves freeing it to another network.
This is what was puzzling to me about this deal between Apple and AT&T. If they are required to allow their phone to work with other carriers, and they issue updates which brick only the phones using other carriers, that seems like a pretty clear case of anti-competitive behaviour. They can't render themselves immune to anti-competitive laws, regardless of what they put in the terms and conditions or whether they've been 100% clear or not. This deal shafts the consumers, plain and simple.
I personally hope that Apple loses a big fat chunk of money. The whole process of locking consumers in to one choice in order to increase their own profits is dodgy. It seems technology is heading towards a place these days where the consumer pays ever more money to upgrade to new devices / software / operating systems, and alls they find are more and more restrictions on how to use whatever they've bought; more and more things that benefit the company and bring detriment to the consumer. A large payout in this case will go a long way towards reversing this stupid, greedy trend.
Simply put, Apple can not disclaim warranty responsibility for software hacks and all that can be enforced is the returning of the phone to a working state with the new updates. They are not required to fix the hack and reinstall any additional apps onto the system that was not originally there (Recovery CD's anyone?). So what will happen is that Apple will have to meet the letter of the law and nothing more after it's determined that the unlocking was done via software and not hardware.
Mod me up/Mod me down: I wont frown as I've no crown
What is now becoming clear is that many unlocked phones come through the upgrade unbricked, albeit re-locked. Considering that recognizing an unlocked phone should be a simple matter of a checksum, it seems clear that Apple was not intentionally "bricking" phones. There are reasons to believe that this is likely an unintended side effect of an update designed primarily to enhance iPhone security. If it was not intentional, Apple is in the clear, as they are under no legal obligation to debug an update to work with phones that have been modified in violation of warranty. And indeed, it seems that while Apple is under no legal obligation to do so, Apple sotres are restoring "bricked" iPhones. Moreover, it is not as if Apple failed to warn owners of unlocked iPhones that applying the update would likely harm their phones.
http://www.au.kddi.com/english/product/lineup/simple_phone_a101k/index.html
It is different because the warranty and user agreement is different.
So this is a bit like asking "I can remodel a house that I buy, so why can't I remodel the house that I rent? A house is a house, right?"
The same type of product may be covered by different contracts under different circumstances, with different legal obligations and privileges.
The way it works is that the lawyer ultimately settles for pennies on the dollar. It is cheaper and safer for the company to settle than to go to court, where there is some risk of losing even if they are in the right, not to mention the bad publicity.
The consumers who are members of the class get a pittance, usually a discount certificate that isn't worth the time it takes to fill out the forms to qualify for it. But the lawyer gets a percentage of all of those little settlements, and goes home substantially richer for almost no work.
If it can be shown that Apple intentionally bricked modified phones (that is to say... had code which specifically detected and *proactively* bricked the phone), then they're in violation of Magnusun v. Moss. This lawsuit establishes the precedent that you are allowed to modify hardware that you own and, unless the company can show that your modification harms the device in some way, then they must honor the warranty.
IANAL, but I don't think this fight is as cut and dry as you believe it to be.
GJC
Gregory Casamento
## Chief Maintainer for GNUstep
I see where you are coming from. However, your analogy is not a fair comparison. You are most certainly not renting the iPhone. It is yours. By the very nature of rental agreement, you do not own anything at all. But by purchasing the iPhone, you have only exchanged money with the vendor in exchange for a piece of hardware. If you want to blend it, unlock it, or even use it with AT&T's rate plan, you can. There is no obligation to do anything with your phone. You could even use it as a paperweight after you've bought it.
But, just to play devil's advocate on your behalf, perhaps the analogy should be with a condo and a house. You do own a condo, but you are bound by certain agreements that limits your freedom. The logic behind these limitations is usually in order to foster a certain type of community for the all condo owners. In fact, Apple's own justification about limiting 3rd party development invokes a desire to avoid "gum[ming] up" the network:
But I believe that's bullshit. Everybody and their brother is allowing development on their phones. Also, in line with this, the U.S. is virtually alone in the world with locked phones. For the beacon of capitalism in the world that the U.S. supposedly represents, we sure don't offer the myriad choices that demand and an free market would dictate must exist. I'm even more impatient with this crap, after living in Asia. I can get cheap, unlocked phones very easily here that will work both in the U.S. and all over the world. And the incentives built-in with providers isn't very convincing except for the most frugal buyer, or perhaps for the the very first-time buyer. Nope, this locking crap (both software and carrier) is for the birds.
I know they are a litigious bunch of asshats, but lately it's like some put crazy in the water.
Fiat Homos et Pereat Theos
From: Apple iPhone support
To: 1001011010110101
Ticket# 38581
Dear 1001011010110101,
We have investigated your complaint re the battery. Our investigation shows that you switched the phone into "vibrate" and then proceeded to call your iPhone from your home phone without answering at least 100 times. The battery should perform as expected with normal use.
Regards,
Apu
iPhone Support
1. I do not agree with a company locking a phone to a provider, however:
.....
.... sooooo simple ...
2. A company has the right to say: you are buying this phone to use with AT&T, if you mess with it and brick it you breach our contract and you lose your warranty
just don't buy the stupid thing if you do not want ATT
when you bought the @#^%!$% phone and cheated. OOOO look at us we beat Apple!!! Guess not huh? If I change the code on my cars engine management unit and F'up the car you think thats Fords fault. You morons are the same people that buy a home at the end of the runway then sue because of the noise!!!!
If you wanted the phones sold unlocked then you should have petition Apple to sell them at full list price just like an HTC but then you don't want to do that do you you want a free ride.
Si vis pacem, para bellum! For evil to succeed good men need only do nothing!
Correction... it's a Act, not a lawsuit. Like I said, IANAL.
Gregory Casamento
## Chief Maintainer for GNUstep
Anyone who believes Apple did not deliberately lock/brick the iPhone is either blind or naive.
"If it bricks a few unlocked phones, well, what do Apple care?"
You apparently aren't thinking of all the steps: 1) Apple locks the iPhone to a carrier with a very bad reputation (formerly SBC, now AT&T). 2) Apple sells the iPhone at a very high price, and after two months lowers the price $200, making enthusiasts unhappy. 3) Apple destroys iPhones that have been modified. 4) Apple repeatedly gets its name on Slashdot, in very negative stories. 5) Slashdot readers are Apple's best customers for iPhones, and for spreading information about iPhones to readers with no technical knowledge. Now Slashdot readers spread negative information, not only about the iPhone, but about Apple itself. 6) Apple is involved in a lawsuit that brings widespread very negative publicity.
7) Profit? Less than otherwise could be expected. What was Jobs thinking? The damage to Apple's reputation may be greater than the extra profit on the iPhone caused by the locking.
I realize that sometimes a company can get too carried away and need to be "corrected". But in general, this is why things are so expensive in the United States. A business cannot make every customer happy but now we have situations where a company can and will be sued by anyone that is unhappy. How long before nothing new arrives in this country because they will get sued for some reason and lose more money than they stand to make? Its insane.
Thanks,
Leabre
I thought a place like slashdot, we'd get rid of people throwing around the term bricking left and right. I was under the impression that bricking meant that the device was completely unusable, you couldn't turn it on and such. All that is happening here is that the phone is being re-locked, and third party apps are being removed. Sure, not the outcome I could have hoped for (I liked my 3rd party apps and can always downgrade), but it's not bricking, and people claiming it is are way off-base. I don't agree with Apple's actions, but you were given plenty of warning, had to say yes TWICE to upgrade, and knew the ramifications of this upgrade weeks or months in advance.
during the years when Apple practiced lock-in most thoroughly, they were the least successful.
How do you define "successful"? In 1980, when Apple went public, it was the single largest hardware manufacturer of PCs by marketshare (variously estimated at between 15% and 40% depending on how you defined it. When the Jobsian closed-Mac launched, Ap-ple was was still one of the largest by volume. The rejection of the Jobs Mac and Apple's neglect of the Apple ][ business led to a decline in marketshare, but the introduction of the expandable Mac II and Sculley's closed system strategy actually increased Apple's marketshare until Mac marketshare peaked between 1992 and 1994 with something around 15%. Since then it dwindled consistently, suffering some of its sharpest drops at the start of Jobs' reign when he pursued his scorched earth policy of discontinuing 3rd-party hardware licensing and laying off most of the R&D and sales channels. The lows were around 1.5% when the Power CPU strategy was reaching its end, and the increase since then has been impressive by Apple's standards but minor by actual industry standards.
Da Blog
Hahahaha! If you don't like the terms, don't buy the product. There's absolutely no way Apple can lose this case!
BTW, my unadulterated iPhone is working fine!
Karma Schmarma
If thine enemy be hungry, give him bread to eat; and if he be thirsty, give him water to drink. For thou shalt heap coals of fire upon his head, and the Lord shall reward thee.
I got a Razr V3i a couple of years ago, unlocked, from eBay cheaper than I could get a locked one from my cell phone company. You just have to look around, rather than buying the cheapest or easiest thing you see.
Thank you. Couldn't have said it better myself. I just plunked down on some Apple products, I like the company, and I really hope I still like them a year from now.
All the goodwill Apple has from the tech-savvy crowd is in jeopardy here, and that ought to be worth something to them.
Vidi, Vici, Veni
Nobody made dude buy the damned thing.
I want to find who is making a Linux kernel/OS for the iPhone and give them a couple hundred bucks, can anyone point me in the right direction?
To see a few of my Android apps goto: www.hartwired.com
Although you're right that the "tech-ignorant media" and the blogosphere are spreading their conspiracy theory about the iPhone update, there is a reasonable amount of information about what the update did. You just have to spend about 3 seconds googling for it:
iPhone update 1.1.1 security items
Apple iPhone update 1.1.1
Uh... and a video. Yeah. A video that tells you about the software update.
iPhone September '07 software update
If you mod me down, I shall become more powerful than you could possibly imagine.
How can a company guarantee functionality of the product if the user deliberately breaks the manufacturer configuration.
If this thing comes to court and the ruling is in Apple's favor, they win.
If the ruling is against Apple, they have to fix the teeny percentage of phones that were bricked, but they sell a jillion more phones because they won't be locked and don't have to be tied to AT&T. So by losing the suit, they win BIG, BIG time.
Hmmmmmm. You don't suppose that the bricking maneuver and this suit (that they knew would ultimately happen) were part of Apple's overall strategy, do you? Nah.
So here you say, "The "Genius" at the Apple store told me that they had intentionally disabled my [sic] iPhone..."
Funny, but on September 3rd you said, "My wife uses an iPhone, but until I can legally program the damned thing, I'm not getting one."
So PLEASE go code for Ubuntu Mobile. Because I'm sure they can use people who just make up shit as they go along...
Any sect, cult, or religion will legislate its creed into law if it acquires the political power to do so.
The iPhone is not like a general-purpose computer; it is like a microwave oven, a router, a television set, a toaster, a TiVO, or a DVD player. In other words, it is an APPLIANCE. The /. crowd, like the people in this lawsuit, have to grow up, and get into the 1980s: In other words, there are embedded systems in a LOT of products; however, that does NOT mean that the manufacturer of your TV's remote control has to provide an SDK so you can cross-compile uCLinux to run on it; nor provide VoIP support for your Motorola Razor, etc.
If someone modded their TiVO to run OpenStep, or decompiled and rewrote their router's software so that it had better packet filtering, or played Pong, and the next CONSENTUALLY ACCEPTED firmware update made it into a finely crafted block of swiss cheese, capability-wise, would there be a lawsuit? Maybe, but not one that would prevail, let alone be granted "class" status!
Jobs laid down the development-law (at least for now) regarding the iPhone: No SDK. Web 2.0 "apps" only. And the "locked" law: Requires contract with AT&T (in the USA). He did this PUBLICLY, LONG before the iPhone went on sale. Not one single purchaser can claim ignorance of those conditions.
And yet, when someone wants to make their iPhone into something it was not developed for, regardless of the capabilities of the underlying OS, and then Apple wants to fix some stuff (and even add some features for free!), then WARNS PEOPLE OF MODIFIED PHONES THAT THEIR CONSENTUALLY ACCEPTED UPDATE MAY BREAK THEIR APPLIANCES, I sincerely believe that this lawsuit is, as it should be, doomed to fail.
Tough. Not Apple's fault. Any other position comes from simply being ignorant of contract law. Apple's phone is working to spec. Apple is in full compliance with thier part of the contract. And so is AT&T. Don't like it? Don't buy an iPhone.
It's just - that - simple.
Please provide me with some references. I'd love to learn more about this because it sounds as though, if it were never cancelled, that third-party manufacturers could today license and sell Macintosh-compatible hardware? Sweet... and amazing that in all that time, nobody was willing to pay the increased licence fees. Given OSX's recent marketshare bump, that would seem attractive to some players. Here are some contrary references that I found:
and finally, a goodie from 1997, worrying that with the rumours of Jobs taking over at Apple, that 3rd-party licences for OS8 would not be forthcoming...
Da Blog
Finally, somebody posts who has read Magnuson-Moss and understands it.
iPhone is a physical consumer product. Apple is the manufacturer.
Under Magnuson-Moss, Apple has several ways to avoid coverage:
1) Have an approved waiver on file, but there's no waiver.
2) Refuse coverage for third-party parts installed, but software is not a part. (Software corps requested and received an exemption from warranty law, so software cannot be a part.)
3) Refuse coverage for physical damage to original parts, but there's no physical damage.
4) If there is physical damage to original parts, prove that such damage was caused by the consumer's modification, but see above.
Since none of these exceptions apply, Apple must comply with the letter of the law and fix/replace the bricked iPhones.
Oh, and before the red herring gets trotted out: Buying a physical product (like an iPhone) does not make you party to the Apple - ATT contract. (You have to buy phone service separately.) In addition, cell phones are specifically exempted from DMCA: It is perfectly legal for you to unlock your iPhone and use it with another provider.
Your first mistake is that you speak of this as if it is only a matter of law. Clearly, this is about more than that. There is a huge population that sees the phone market as something more than an embedded system. And they want products that act as more than embedded systems. So, while this may or may not be settled in Apple's favor in the courts, there can be little doubt that handheld computers with cellular service will be a market force to be reckoned with in the not too distant future. If Apple succeeds in rebuffing people who would push the iPhone closer to that goal, then they are quite simply backpedaling from something the market desires.
Secondly, there is an issue of intentionally breaking the iPhone. So far Apple is just playing as if is an "unfortunate" side-effect. However, if it can be shown that such updates could easily avoid bricking the iPhones, then I think Apple should be sued. Think about it. If you take your Buick into a Buick dealership to get work done, and you sign a release form saying "If there are any non-Buick parts, you agree that we me return your car in non-working condition" that would be completely ridiculous. Even if this is lawful, it should receive a lot of bad publicity. This is simply anti-consumer. Even a failed lawsuit is a loss for Apple in this case. It brings attention to Apple's practice of bricking iPhones.
Finally, please cite where law requires a subscription to AT&T? Seriously. You are not required to activate your iPhone with AT&T. If I wanted to buy an iPhone for an art project, a paperweight, for a prop in a play or movie, or any other weird reason, I seriously doubt I would be contractually obligated to sign up with AT&T. Why would this be any different if instead of hooking it to AT&T, I decided to use T-Mobile? There is no law forbidding this. The only possible problem is distributing the unlock, which may (but probably doesn't) violate the DMCA:
So, if you decide not to accept AT&T's TOS by never activating your phone with AT&T, then I don't see how their TOS applies to you. And no contract is signed by buying the iPhone.
MOD PARENT UP! He is disagreeing with a comment I made, and even I want him modded up.
I agree with what you said. However, it does not change the basic arithmetic of Apple with iPhone:
Apple iPhone profit =
+ profit from hardware
+ commissions from AT&T
- damage to Apple's reputation.
("Lameness filter encountered. Post aborted! Reason: Please use fewer 'junk' characters.")
> Do you mean that wireless providers in Europe are explicitly required to unlock your
> phone (if you ask, for some fee)?
Depends on the country.
In Denmark, they are obliged to unlock the phone after 6 months, which is the longest legally binding period for this kind of contracts. They are not allowed to require a fee for that.
I used that for my first cell phone, there were no problems.
These days, the six month subscription fee tend to be a pretty good match for the price difference between a locked and an unlocked phone. And some subscription plans have a sharp drop in the subscription fee after six months.
My current vendor doesn't even bother sim-locking the phones.
You said: Your first mistake is that you speak of this as if it is only a matter of law. Clearly, this is about more than that.
.0000001% world. And I would also imagine that Apple will prevail.
;-)
That's true. In a lawsuit, there are also facts. But there are NOT "emotions, wants or desires". This is a product liability v. contract law dispute. Period. Dot. The End. Sorry if you are too ignorant of law or emotionally immature to see that. But that is what it is.
Me, I LOVE features! I LOVE expandibility! I have reverse-engineered embedded systems to add features.
But I would NEVER expect my modifications to those single-purpose (or limited-purpose) systems to survive a software update. Epecially not one where I was WARNED might negatively impact my joy...
Second, I misspoke when I said the purchase of an iPhone requires a contract with AT&T. What I should have said was "Using the cellphone features of the iPhone requires a contract with AT&T". However, it is a distinction with very little difference. I would imagine the percentage of iPhone customers who have elected not to use the cellphone or cellular data features of their iPhone is probably in the
1. It was a consensual update. No MacroSuck(TM) "forced update" stuff here!
2. You were warned before the phone was on sale that using the phone in the US meant AT&T.
3. You were warned before the phone was on sale that the only "apps" would be web-based.
4. You had 14 days under Apple's normal return policy to return the phone for a refund.
5. You were warned that this particular update may adversely affect modified phones.
It really is that simple. Anything else is just whining, and quite unbecoming of an adult...
I've looked online, and the nearest I can find to a MacWeek archive is this. I can't find any of these negotiations you mention. Cringely/Stephens said in 1997 that:
Which seems to back up your assertion. But if this is true, and at least some cloners were willing to pay Jobs' super-increased tax, where are they now and why did they not continue? Was the tax priced deliberately high enough effectively to kill the contracts without appearing to be the primary party backing out of a relationship entered into in good faith?
Da Blog
people bought clones because they were less expensive than the real thing.
Some did, but I recall that some people were buying some of the higher-end clones because they offered some advanced dual- and quad-CPU options (for example, DayStar Digital) that were unavailable or under-spec'd by Apple at that time. In many case, they were paying the same or more for these than extant retail for Apple kit.
I found a short clip of Jobs exerting the Reality Distortion Field wrt clone licences. Jobs derides their value, but this says they were a 7.25% royalty... low, but not "$50", assuming an average of $2,000 retail for every Power Computing machine, some 50,000 generating $100m in sales.
All in all Jobs' attitude presented quite a change from Apple's earlier I Think We're A Clone Now enthusiasm. Here's another vintage video, a news extract describing Apple's short-lived experiment with Macintosh licensing.
Under Jobs, Apple resorted to several strategies to squelch the Mac cloners. One cunning method was to rebrand OS 7.7 as OS 8, thereby voiding existing pricing deals and enabling Apple to reset terms that were more punitive. In the case of Power Computing, Apple paid $100m to buy the company outright, including all its IP, and thus shut down one of the more prominent cloners. Apple also got PC's impressive direct ordering system modelled on Gateway/Dell , which enabled it to build out its apple.com sales channel.
Da Blog
Something about this has been puzzling me.
Due to the recent price drop, there are quite a large number of iphone users that purchased the iphone at a considerable premium over the present street value of the iphone. With the bricking affecting unmodded iphones also, why don't those iphone owners take advantage of lemon laws to return their iphones for the full value and then repurchase the iphone at it's current street value, thus netting the difference ?
I think Apple would certainly notice the cash loss to their bottom line a lot more than another lawsuit over locking.
Even though your discourse lacks the most basic conventions of debate or decorum and you confound insults with substance, I feel compelled to respond because my point still stands, un-addressed by your non sequiturs and ad hominem asides.
My original contention was that, the law..., yes, the law (readily acknowledged) in this area seems to give special attention to unlocking of cellular devices. Other computing devices of various sizes with analogous abilities are not so regulated. Moreover, I also expressed the desire that such challenges will push a change in the law. I'd be equally satisfied if the obvious dissatisfaction of users would push for a change by Apple itself.
Moreover, I don't dispute many of the elegantly and oh so subtly disseminated points you support. They are simply irrelevant to my post. Sure, Apple warned, sure Apple probably can't be shown to have broken the law. But what does that have to do with my comments? Quite frankly, Apple (and most hardware companies) as a matter of course make special effort to make sure that their mass-market consumer devices are bullet-proof and idiot-proof. And that's at the very least. In fact, many competitors in the very same market as the iPhone encourage 3rd party development and freely sell unlocked phones. Notably, their updates never brick their products. Sure, at this juncture, Apple is free to inconvenience as many or as few customers as it chooses. If this behavior (callous at best and malicious at worst) is what we can expect from Apple (and in general, they do much better than this, and in fact are better than most companies), then there will be no "whining", just a change in consumer preference, at least on my part.
And yes you did misspeak, and continue to do so. You are not contractually obliged to use any hardware capabilities in any particular way. If you decided to use them with T-Mobile (even, -gasp-, the cellular capabilities) you wouldn't be breaking any contract. (Although, as an aside, if you could provide contradictory evidence in the form of a link to such a contract and a legal interpretation by a disinterested party, I'd be obliged.)
In conclusion, I reiterate my point that this an issue larger than the law. It is about the viability of particular strategies for Apple's iPhone, of which the narrow legalistic interpretation that you take is only a small part. So, while your assertions regarding your own chosen "walled garden" of argument may in some abstract sense be "true" (although this is by no means guaranteed), they in no way impact the bigger and more interesting picture. Even if the lawsuit fails miserably, I think the minor revolt by its customers has already been duly noted by Apple and will become an important part of their calculus in their future development of this product.
"Apple is also perfectly within their rights to not give warranty service to those that modded their phone. The Magnuson-Moss Act only provides protection to those whose aftermarket bits did not cause the phone to die. If these folks had not modded their phone, the update would not have killed it."
Umm, the modification didn't cause the phone to die, the update did. The phone worked after the mod, it didn't work after the update.
Isn't it obvious that Apple released the update at least knowing that it would brick a modded phone? Isn't it even probable that they intended this?
Apple's choice bricked the phone. Apple's actions were intended to brick modded phones.
Denying warranty coverage on this basis is *EXACTLY* what Magnusson-Moss prohibits.
There are two camps to this argument, but both neglect the obvious answer:
Camp A maintains that AT&T/Apple are evil for not supplying SKDs, for locking everyone into the service, for not unlocking the phones, for bricking (intentionally or unintentionally) custom-modified phones.
Camp B says that Apple and AT&T can do whatever the hell they want because the product (the phone) and the service (cellular access) are two completely different products. Synopsis: "If you modify your own phone (perfectly within your right to do it), and it breaks some functionality, how exactly is that Apple's OR AT&T's problem?"
I think the right answer is to educate yourself about the product you're buying and then make the choice whether to buy the product. Apple, good or bad, was very up-front that if you buy the phone, the service is through AT&T only and that the minimum contract length is 2 years.
They were also up-front about the cost of the phone and the cost of the monthly service to the phone.
I can't believe that so many people laid out hard-earned cash for the phone, made custom modifications to the phone, and expect Apple to continue to support it.
It does suck that the phones are tied to AT&T. Don't like? Don't buy.
In the time-honored tradition of Slashdot car analogies, the iPod is like a Bentley that you're only allowed to drive on certain streets. Freedom of choice is important to me; therefore I buy cars that I can drive on m/any streets. It seems far more practical to spend money on something that works the way I want it to, rather than to buy it, break it and then sue someone else to make it work.
Why spend $500 on a phone that doesn't do what you want it to (IE, is tied to only one network, doesn't have an SDK, doesn't do x, yo or z)?
Maybe people just have far too much money...
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