US Government May Not Be Able To Fix Cell Phone Unlocking Problem
An anonymous reader writes "We recently discussed what appeared to be a positive response from the Obama administration on the legality of cell phone unlocking. Unfortunately, the Obama administration may not be able to do anything about it. It has already signed away our rights under a trade agreement with South Korea. Lawyer Jonathan Band, who works for the Association of Research Libraries, wrote, 'The White House position, however, may be inconsistent with the U.S. proposal in the Trans-Pacific Partnership Agreement (TPP) and existing obligations in the Korea-U.S. Free Trade Agreement (KORUS) and other free trade agreements to which the United States is a party. This demonstrates the danger of including in international agreements rigid provisions that do not accommodate technological development.'You can read more about this issue in a short eight page legal primer by Jonathan Band (PDF). An interesting, related note that the U.S.-KOREA FTA is possibly inconsistent with our domestic patent/drug law in the Hatch-Waxman Act as well. The trade agreement requires us to grant injunctions until the patent is invalidated as opposed to thirty months under current domestic law."
KORUS does allow for administrative procedures like the DMCA's rule-making to adopt temporary exemptions, but not permanent ones. The challenge before Congress is to devise a permanent exception for cell phone unlocking that does not breach the obligations under KORUS and other similar free trade agreements
The US constitution allows temporary copyrights; Congress has managed to ignore the spirit of the constitution by extending copyright terms 20 years every 20 years. How about we just do the same with DMCA exemptions?
Palm trees and 8
It seems that these days IP legislation tries to swallow everything. Nothing is safe from IP laws.
It's time to reverse that trend, most of the DMCA should be considered unconstitutional anyhow. If someone sold me a device, why can't I tear it apart to see how it was built?
Patents and copyrights exist for making sure no one needs to keep trade secrets. The intent of those laws is to let people learn about the technical details behind the technology.
Having laws that restricts the liberty of learning goes against every principle of a civilized society.
other countries have laws that phones must be unlocked or the carriers must give out the unlock code.
We need to end carrier only phones and phones with all the carrier software forced on you that you have to hack your own phone to remove it you should have the choice of how much of the software that you want. Visual voice mail (good), a app that let's you see how many mins / data / txt of your plan that you used and uses there meter (good) other apps not so much.
Who would have guessed?
There's a lot of laws on the books that are never enforced. There's roads where everybody drives 15 miles per hour over the speed limit and nobody ever gets a ticket because everybody knows that it's perfectly safe and that the limit is just set too slow. There was recently a law passed in Florida where all non-US citizens had to have an international driver's license to drive in the state. They forgot about all the Canadians who go there every winter. Once they realized the problem, they told all the cops to just ignore the law. This is just without even mentioning the completely ridiculous laws that are still on the books from hundreds of years ago. Just because a law is on the books, doesn't mean they have to enforce it. If there's no mandatory minimum punishments required as part of the trade agreements, judges could just let people off with a very small fine, and cops would learn that it wasn't worth their time to charge anybody for breaking the law.
Anthropic principle: We see the universe the way it is because if it were different we would not be here to see it.
Congress can pass the law; they have that power, and no mere treaty can take it away.
What happens, if Congress passes a law that is in conflict with the treaty is that the most recent of them is in effect in the US.
As for our international obligations, we have a few choices: We can withdraw from the treaty. We can seek to renegotiate the relevant part of the treaty. Or we can ignore the conflict. If we ignore it, there may be some enforcement mechanism intended to encourage us to do something, but depending on what it is, we may be able to ignore that too. After all, the US is in violation of the Berne Convention and we've ignored that successfully for over a decade now.
-- This and all my posts are in the public domain. I am a lawyer. I am not your lawyer, and this is not legal advice.
>US Government May Not Be Able To Fix Cell Phone Unlocking Problem
The U.S. (FCC/FTC?) can STOP the problem of locked phones by issuing an order saying that locked phones cannot be sold starting 5 minutes from now. The phone manufactures will starting doing back-flips unlocking new and current phones so fast the earths spin might slow down some.
I really don't see why phones are locked in the first place. You're already tied to the carrier with a legal contract. There shouldn't need to be a technical measure in place to make sure you don't take the phone to a different carrier. If you try to leave before the contract is over, there's already high fees for breaking the contract. If you choose to not pay those fees, it would probably look bad on your credit rating. After your contract term ends, you should be free to do whatever you want with the phone. Actually, If they now have the system in place to block stolen phones, the major providers could probably place the phones from non-paid contracts on a list where they would refuse to allow the phone be used until the contract is paid in full.
Anthropic principle: We see the universe the way it is because if it were different we would not be here to see it.
Invade another country? "No problem. We'll just have to change the rules."
Make it legal ( again ) to unlock phones? "We want to do it but our hands are tied."
Of course it is bullshit!
They are not doing it because their corporate owners don't want them to. They just want to make it seem like they are on our side. If they are, then who is this mystical other side that makes this impossible. This is bullshit.
I find it really ironic that it is a "Free Trade Agreement" that is preventing an activity that fundamentally is "Free Trade" (you can sell an unlocked phone to someone on another network).
I believe it comes down to the fact that governments support business at the expense of small business and DIYers. Probably because small business can't aford lobbyists.
http://yetanotherpoliticalrant.blogspot.com
It is the carriers which are responsible for the locking. The suppliers don't give a rat's tail about whether a phone is locked or not. The carriers make the requests and the suppliers deliver on that request. Suppliers have no dog in the fight over locked vs. unlocked beyond the mild fact that a locked phone will likely stay in the region in which it was procured. But people who relocate and wish to take their phones with them are an insignificant minority.
I get the feeling this is a blame and information deflecting piece intended to point people in directions which are not relevant.
This is the most worrisome part of the story:
The draft text for TPP is secret, but the U.S. proposal for the IP chapter was leaked two years ago. The leaked proposal contained KORUS's closed list of exceptions.
How can the US sign a treaty that is secret from the citizens of the US? The government shouldn't be allowed to sign (or even consider) a trade treaty with secret terms. How else can the people know if they want to be party to the treaty?
Because, fuck you, that's why.
Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
No need to be AL. The TPP is being forced down many countries throats despite many anti-democratic problems by, you guessed it, US special interest groups, their lobby mouthpieces and owned politicians. The US elite feigned "positive response" to our concern over cell phone unlocking only due to the enormous amount of people who cried out - to many to just ignore this time round. Now they are using the TPP stick that they crafted to beat our demand for democratic review of the law down, and put the masses back in our place. Oh, but sure they had no choice... yeah, right.
Carrier lock is simply a way for them to try to abduct more customers. I use abduct very purposefully here.
abduct [ab-duhkt] verb (used with object) 1. to carry off or lead away (a person) illegally and in secret or by force, especially to kidnap.
There is no technical or contractual reason to keep you locked. The OP is correct in that you sign a binding legal contract when entering a contract with a mobile carrier, but when that contract is up, they want you to stay, not run off to some n-contract or other carrier with the phone you purchased (albiet at a subsidy) from them. If their contract did not cover the subsidy discount on the phone, then they need to redo their math and stop devices that are now legally owned by others hostage.
In addition to this however, there is no incentive for handset makers to push to change it. If you cannot continue to use your phone on a carrier you like, what do you do? You purchase a new phone and the handset maker profits as well.
None of this fosters competition or aids the consumer. It is solely a self serving policy by those in (capitalistic) power.
Silence is a state of mime.
Even if a treaty forbids Congress from correcting DMCA, it should be easy to do something about it. FCC could ban the manufacture, sale, and trafficking in devices which transmit on licensed spectrum, if those devices require DMCA violations in order to repurpose.
That wouldn't be as good as repealing DMCA, but it would make DMCA irrelevant to this narrow case. Can't unlock iPhones? Ok, unlocking iPhones will remain illegal. But it'll also be illegal to sell locked iPhones. If someone wants a locked iPhone, sell 'em a locked iPod Touch instead, implement the phone functionality using wifi.
Of course: fuck the treaty. Repeal DMCA instead. And fuck all these narrow DMCA-amending proposals which are limited to "wireless devices."
"Believe me!" -- Donald Trump
Having "unenforced" laws on the books that everyone breaks is dangerous because it allows police to selectively enforce those laws when they need to punish a specific individual or group (cracking down on homeless people for loitering for example, or the overly broad "computer hacking" law which was used to go after Arron Swartz).
Support Right To Repair Legislation.
What happened is the US government found a good excuse for saying one thing and doing another to make it appear like it was on your side without that actually being so.
Welcome to politics.
Even before the contract ends,. you should be allowed to do whatever you want with the phone. If I sign the contract and decide I want to use my Nokia 3110. I should be allowed to do that.
The phone that I got with the deal I should be allowed to give to my kid to play games on. I should be able to sell it.
If I make more money on selling the phone then I did by paying you, then that pricing policy of yours is YOUR problem, not mine.
It is not just locking. Bundled sales is the other part that is bad for people.
Don't fight for your country, if your country does not fight for you.
It is perfectly legal for the President to signa treaty that says "We will send all of our mushrooms to Canada."
Then Congress can pass a law that says "We will not send ANY mushrooms to Canada."
In such a case than it is illegal to send mushrooms to Canada, no matter what the treaty says. Canada can sue us in international court, and that court may assign sanctions to us, but they can not force us to send them all our mushrooms.
excitingthingstodo.blogspot.com
Congress can fix this problem. Congress just doesn't want to fix this problem. See the difference?
I'm trying to teach myself to set people on fire with my mind... Is it hot in here?