Google Allows Carriers To Ban Tethering Apps
iluvcapra writes "Google, in its continuing struggle to provide phone carriers (if not its end users) with an open platform, is now banning tethering apps from the Android market. These apps haven't disappeared and can still be sideloaded, insofar as your carrier doesn't lock this functionality or snoop on your packets."
From what I've seen (from screenshots) they're not banned as such, but they will not load to a specific carrier if that carrier has asked that it be blocked. You can still side-load it, with your carrier's data charges being incurred at your peril.
But the plan said "unlimited"! Now how will I BitTorrent 50GB Blu-Ray rips?
There's no -1 for "I don't get it."
It puts more load on their network if you use up your five gigabytes of monthly data with your laptop instead of your cell phone, unless you pay extra for it.
Google Allows Carriers To Ban Tethering Apps
I beg to differ, and here's why.
Android based smart phone users are not prevented from installing tethering apps from elsewhere. In fact, one can [still] install them if on the Sprint network.
What Google has done is to 'comply' with Verizon's request to have tethering apps removed from the Android Market if this market is accessed by Android devices *on* the Verizon network.
This falls short of a ban as implied by the diction in the title.
But...but Android is open!!1
they're fun to talk to when you're alone.
What happens if I remove my SIM card, boot up my phone and get onto the Google Market using my WLAN?
I was wondering - couldn't you just configure your phone to use a VPN tunnel and then tether a laptop. That way there's no way your carrier could snoop on your packets. I was under the impression most phones support VPN tunnels, are tethering apps incompatible?
My somewhat rubbish Nokia 5800 supports tethering via the Nokia PC suite on Windows or directly within Ubuntu. My carrier (Vodafone Australia) doesn't give a shit and has never given a shit about me tethering my phone.
WTF is happening over in the US? Will things ever get better (for users anyway) in the telecommunications area?
With virtually all carriers capping virtually all plans these days, any rationale for preventing tethering disappeared.
Now it is simply GREED. They have special plans that add tethering. Therefore you can't tether for free any more.
They can't claim network impact. As long as you stay under your Cap what is the problem?
There is precious little data to suggest tethering users actually use more data. I know I don't. Sometimes I just want to
send an email attachment that happens to be on my laptop. Some times I need to SSH into a server and can't put up with
trying do deal with a command line task on that tiny screen.
But it seems the defenders of this clamp down all seem to be rushing to defending the carriers because the carriers
rely on the "over sell" of their bandwidth. Any user that approaches his CAP is therefore somehow stealing from
the carrier. (I kid you not, I've seen this argument posted).
But even to reach that level of gullibility you have to buy into the idea that people who tether use more data. But its just not supported by the facts.
The coming release of a flood of WIFI only tablets, with no continuing data plan for the carriers has a lot of people planning to tether these tablets for those few times a year when traveling where there is no handy WIFI. The carriers are trying to nip this in the bud, and they believe that every handheld device needs to have a carrier plan.
Sig Battery depleted. Reverting to safe mode.
Very few industries have the sheer audacity to offer natural, built-in features of an electronic device that they don't have any ownership of as a service. Brah-vah.
I personally plan to sell as a service using chairs as mini-tables, car keys as box-openers, and toothpicks as appetizer handles. --So, if any of you think any of those are good ideas, want to pay me to be able to do them, and already own keys, a chair or toothpicks...
Android based smart phone users are not prevented from installing tethering apps from elsewhere.
Nor were iPhone users before official tethering support was released. I had a tethering app I compiled myself, and any Jailbreak user could happily buy tethering apps as well.
Therefore Apple has never banned an app, since you can simply sideload it by jailbreaking.
"There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
Android only uses Linux based kernel. How does it make it open. You can't update anything on your Android phone without the permission from carrier/manufacturer/google. Google hasn't released latest Andrioid source code, not that it would help user in any way. You can't use gps on Android phone without giving google all your location information. The truth is, apart from the fact that you can download uncertified app on google android, you can't do anything more that what you can do on competing platform. I don't think this makes it any more open than other offerings.
It is still evil.
This totally works. Yes. This makes it impossible for anyone without your VPN keys to inspect your packets. VPN is just an encrypted P2P connection. Carriers will not arbitrarily block encrypted connections. Ergo, this is technically how to overcome any attempts to block tethering by the network provider. If carriers begin to routinely block tethering, this is how the technically adept will respond.
Here is another example of why all traffic on the internet should always be encrypted. Should we fork the internet, this is how the new, forked version will have to work.
It's not quite "being evil" but it's getting closer.
Sure, I know it's more about carries being evil, which they are masters of, but I would be more impressed with Google if they demonstrated a little more backbone.
Have you got your LWN subscription yet?
Is there a delay in here? Lately I've been reading stuff here that I read everywhere else a couple of days ago.
are we not purchasing 5gb of "unlimited" data usage? Why does the carrier have any say in how we use it. and if they do have a say and are snooping packets don't they break the provider nutrality?
But with the least of four evils (T-Mobile USA) soon to be bought by arguably the greatest of them (AT&T), what do you recommend that smartphone customers who value their freedom do?
Having been continually disappointed by Android, both in terms of the platform and the phones it runs on... Well, the fact that I could just hop on the market, grab a tethering app, and not have to have a nerdgasm rooting my goddamned phone has been the only reason I've been unhappily debating snagging another Android device when my contract is up this year.
Playing games with tethering? Great. Now there's no reason I shouldn't just get an iPhone.
Keep your bazaar and its ugliness and foul odors; I'll happily go order pizza from the cathedral.
Sim card? Not seen one of those in years.
So what exactly does your phone used to make calls? Pixie dust?
U.S. wireless carriers that aren't AT&T (and aren't about to be bought by AT&T) use CDMA2000 instead of GSM and UMTS, and CDMA2000 phones don't necessarily use a CSIM. Verizon Wireless and Sprint have chosen to forgo CSIM in favor of a subscriber identity programmed directly into the handset.
MY guess is they start off with traffic analysis, looking for data patterns that look unusual for a phone. Once they have found that they have a couple of choices
1: just threaten the person immediately. Afaict most contracts have clauses that allow them to be terminated for any or no reason whatsoever.
2: dig in more detail to see if they can find hard evidence of tethering.
note: i'm known as plugwash most places but i screwd up registering that here somehow in the past and now can't register
Except of course that it doesn't work everywhere. Two of the major carriers here in Canada (Telus and Rogers) block VPN unless you specifically pay for it as an addition to your data plan. If you don't have the option on your plan the VPN session will fail to authenticate with an error stating that the connection to the remote server cannot be established.
You just have to have the vpn server on port 80 or 443 and you'll look a lot like https :)
That's what I do to get on my vpn from the library.
I clutch my urine bag and dream of electronic urine transformation!
Precious Android, and all of its defenders. Further proof Slashdot is now fully occupied by the cruft of the tech community.
It's going to be interesting to see them snoop packets encrypted through a Tor network. The Guardian Project already has a Tor app in the market and are also working on a lot of other cool tools.
Confucius say: "Man who associates with smarter men than himself is smarter than the men he associates with."
I already dropped my cellphone plan because the data package was too expensive, being forced to purchase a separate tethering plan that is more expensive makes me think I have made the right choice. Im not going to be paying for two data plans, my home internet and my cell internet. Ill find a way to make it work with home internet and wifi hotspots.
What is a carrier you recommend for using a smartphone with tethering and using your phone as a wireless hot spot (as I understand the Droid 2 and Droid X) can do?
Thanks
-- Sam
As much as I'd like for this to be true, what they sold you was, "X Gigabytes/Month @ Y Data Rate, consumed by normal usage of the device without tehering an external device." It's in your contract. I you don't like the terms, don't agree to them. Now, of course, it's not like there is actual competition, but, nobody says you have to buy the service. Just forgo it.
Over-the-top Response Guy! Giving "Over-the-Top Responses" since 1970.
That'd be nice, if I had a reasonable choice of cell providers. VZ supplies great coverage in my area. All the other carriers? Not so much.
Can I go to the carriers and dicker for a better contract? Nope. I'm stuck with whatever they give me. Whatever they give me smells similar to what the other guys are pushing.
A bit is a bit is a bit. I understand why they don't want tethering, and I think it's dirty. If I buy a hammer, I darn well ought to be able to use it however I choose, within legal boundaries. If I buy a data plan, I darn well ought to be able to use it however I choose. They need to quit trying to control my use to boost their profits.
This is only if you buy the handset itself from AT&T, though.
AT&T, unlike a carrier that it's about to buy, offers no discount on service for customers who buy a handset separately instead of taking a subsidized handset. So I'd be paying $430 (price difference between unsubsidized Nexus S and subsidized comparable phone) for freedom.
my conclusion so far has been that only devices running stock Google software (e.g. Nexus One/S) are worth buying.
If I buy a Nexus S now, will it continue to work even after AT&T buys T-Mobile USA?
For a time I could go into a browser, visit a specific site and say "Jailbreak" and it was done (I can still do that if I simply downgrade to an older iOS version).
So what is the difference between that link and your checkbox? It's one click either way.
Furthermore, as another poster noted for some Android devices there is no checkbox, you cannot root because the handset maker does not want you doing that. So there is no clear point where you can really say rooting is easier than jailbreaking or vice/versa.
"There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
On Android, you can load up a tethering app without the need to install some shady jailbreak
There's nothing shady about jailbreaking; millions do so. The guy who runs Cydia speaks at many iPhone development conferences, and jailbreaking has been proven to be a legal activity. It's perfectly above-board since Jailbreaking was never about piracy but about extended user modification of the device.
and compromise your handset's security.
You mean like checking a box that says "load apps from untrusted sources" and going to random web-sites to download tethering apps?
Yeah, huge difference.
At least I was compiling my own tethering apps after looking over the source. Good luck with your plan.
"There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
"Shady jailbreak"? It's Apple that has a problem with shady jailbreaks, not Android.
That's what he was (wrongly) claiming. You guys are on the same page. Re-read his post.
secondly there's nothing shady about gaining control of your own property
Thank you; as I stated in my post there's nothing shady about jailbreaking (or rooting).
"There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
They're making billions. I have no sympathy for them if they refuse to put it to good use.
I have left slashdot and am now on Soylent News. FUCK YOU DICE.
Am I the only one thinking "MarketEnabler" by "rac" which can be found in the official Google Market and fakes a user-defined or preset Carrier-ID? This has enabled me for months to buy Apps on Android Market from a non-market country and should work to bypass such imposed limitations too...
This is what happens when you add (Do No Evil) aka Google, with (Do Evil) aka Verizon, AT&T, etc.
Lets give (Do No Evil) a value of 0.
(Do Evil) would be 1.
Class? Buehler? Buehler?
* Carthago Delenda Est *
Make the changes slowly enough and no one will notice... it seems to be working.
Kill all humans...
At least now we know who is really at fault for tethering being so underground.
It's the carriers that don't like it.
They probably forced google's hand:
Carrier: Block tethering or we won't let your phone run on our network
Google: How about if we let you decide for yourself?
Carrier: eh, good enough...*BLOCK*
Google: Not our fault, blame them *POINT*
So much for that!
BeauHD. Worst editor since kdawson.
One does not expect prices to approach costs in a free market, but to approach the equilibrium between how much people are willing to pay and how much producers are willing to sell for. Costs usually, but not always, set a floor for one side of this equilibrium. But So long as people are willing to pay substantially above costs, sellers have no motivation to lower costs. They are in the profit maximization game after all. There is only motive to lower costs if by doing so the seller will increase sales volume by a large enough amount to make up the difference in the lower profit margin per unit.
If a service, such as SMS, is practically free to provide and yet people are willing to pay a premium for it, Telcos would be nuts to lower prices.
Now, there may also be collusion at play in the US market, but the high price of SMS services compared to the cost of providing those services won't by itself tell you anything about such collusion.
If price is your gig, consider MetroPCS
From MetroPCS: "You have entered a zip code that is not within a MetroPCS service area."
Metro not available in your area? Well, consider Cricket Wireless
From Cricket's voice coverage tool and broadband coverage tool, which link my zip code in northeast Indiana to a Google map that appears completely covered by the "Partner coverage" color: "Excessive use of Partner coverage may subject your service to early termination, in accordance with your service terms."
If I'm not mistaken, Android versions 2.1 and up are supposed to have tethering functions built in, and what's to keep you from using those? The carriers can't simply 'break' Android just for the sake of keeping customers from making use of the tethering functions, that would be illegal.
So if I learn of an Android application that I want to use, but it isn't on Amazon, AppsLib, SlideME, or direct APK download, how exactly should I word a request to the developer to make it available other than on Android Market? For example, my bank offers quick deposit of checks through a device's camera and makes an application to do this available through Android Market. But it appears to be exclusive to Android Market; searching for chase on Amazon, AppsLib, and SlideME doesn't list Chase's official application among any of the three sets of results. Nor does Chase.com provide a direct APK download; users are expected to scan a QR barcode that expands to a URL beginning with market://, which works only on devices with Android Market.
Mod up Parent
I8-D
So the only thing needed for the Americans is switch to "SIM-carded" phones (and get a law through that they can for a small fee get to keep their phone number when switching carriers).
Correct me if I'm misunderstanding it.
To be, or not to be: isn't that quite logical, Slashdot Beta?
Prices in this sort of market (which includes all technology markets) aren't set by costs: they are set by willingness to pay. Like any business, the operators want to have different products at different price points in order to have both a low price entry-level service and a higher priced service which offers more. It is just like the airlines: you can get a cheap ticket which just gets you there or you can buy a lounge access as an add-on (even though your lounge usage costs them virtually nothing).
This sort of thing is going to happen more and more and is a good thing because it is the only way the basic service is going to be affordable to the lowest economic tiers. Without this sort of segmented offer, operators will not walk away from the high prices the high end users are willing to pay -- so you either pay a high price or you don't get the service at all!
However, personally, I don't think that tethering is likely to remain as an add-on for long -- it just isn't valuable enough to people. New network features will allow operators to use things which are much more valuable to differentiate their plans in the future (like higher definition video).
I use PDAnet almost everyday to connect a desktop PC to a wireless network, because I'm lazy and don't feel like buying a usb dongle...
So now I can't get updates?
Thanks to the usb debugging it's quite easy to use a proxy server on the phone instead of full tethering. I prefer this as it lets me specify which programs use the internet on the phone so, for example, windows update doesn't try to update over 3G.
I'd think that carriers can't tell the difference between proxy traffic and regular traffic as it would just appear as an http get request from the phone.
Sure, my brick has very few uses, but no one can tell me I can/can't use them.
What do I know, I'm just an idiot, right?
Anyone who still wants tethering can just go to http://www.xda-developers.com/ and figure out one way or another to make it work. I have my verizon droid incredible rooted, and use tethering, but only occasionally so as not to raise any red flags. It suits me just fine.
One is a supported feature of the phone and one is a security hole which no longer exists.
That's an implementation detail, because the fact is it's still almost as easy to jailbreak. But at the time, to the user, there was no difference - and that is what you cannot admit, because you MUST have Android exhibit some superiority over Apple regardless of the facts.
"There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
Arguably there was no difference to the user before, but that's in the past
Not for people who have not updated, and for people who have kept up to date jailbreaking is as simple as running a program - which takes one click to run.
There's a difference now since the security hole has been fixed.
Why?
That's the benefit of using a feature versus an exploit.
There's not really any difference to the user since primarily they just jailbreak by running an app. That app is maintained just like the ability to root an Android phone.
There is no difference to the user.
"There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
As opposed to shoe-horning root access into a system that isn't designed for the end-user to have root access.
Neither is Android. Yet there is rooting. Bot iOS and Android support root users to the same degree, with tools and OS help that supports a root user doing what they need to do.
"There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley