White House Petition To Make Cell Phone Unlocking Legal Needs 11,000 Signatures 193
On January 26th, unlocking a cell phone that is under contract became illegal in the U.S. Just before that went into effect, a petition was started at whitehouse.gov to have the Librarian of Congress revisit that decision. "It reduces consumer choice, and decreases the resale value of devices that consumers have paid for in full. The Librarian noted that carriers are offering more unlocked phones at present, but the great majority of phones sold are still locked." The 30 days time limit on the petition is almost up, and it's about 11,000 signatures shy of the amount necessary to ensure a response from the Obama administration (100,000 total, recently increased from 25,000). The creator of the petition received a Cease & Desist letter from Motorola in 2005 for selling software that would allow users to unlock their phones, and he thinks it's only a matter of time before such legal threats begin again. This is part of a larger battle to protect the way consumers can use their devices. While it's still legal for people to root their phones, the Librarian of Congress failed to expand that legal protection to tablets, even though the devices are incredibly similar. The Librarian's decision (PDF) needs further review, and if the White House petition doesn't get enough signatures by February 23, such a review may not happen.
I'm sure posting it on /. (Score:2)
Re:I'm sure posting it on /. (Score:4, Informative)
Re: (Score:3)
Down to 9,795 as of this post, so about 30 signatures per minute.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:3)
8,043
Re: (Score:2)
7,635
Re: (Score:2)
2,837
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
1,125
Re: (Score:2)
917
Re: (Score:2)
878
Re: (Score:2)
One more signature needed!
Oh no, my mistake... 313 :p
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Well, it certainly doesn't help when I'm not receiving my initial sign on email from the petition site! Basically, account creation is done, but I'm blocked from logging in because I never receive an email :/
Re: (Score:2)
It's the government... they said wait a few minutes, so it'll be in your inbox in 1-2 business days. Still, bookmark this, sign yourself in when you can and go sign it, cell phone carriers represent every single evil of the free market imaginable, don't give them an inch.
Re: (Score:2)
Do a password reset. They give you a one-time log-in link without having to actually reset your password.
Re: (Score:2)
Yes, this is a battle worth winning.
Re: (Score:3)
Also, please sign the CISPA petition while you're up there: https://petitions.whitehouse.gov/petition/stop-cispa-cyber-intelligence-sharing-and-protection-act/19sQhBpy [whitehouse.gov]
Re: (Score:2)
I like these ones:
Organ donor opt-out: https://petitions.whitehouse.gov/petition/pass-bill-change-united-states-organ-donation-system-be-opt-out-rather-opt/B04YdczT [whitehouse.gov]
Pink firearms: https://petitions.whitehouse.gov/petition/require-all-civilian-firearms-be-painted-pink/YfFtRGVL [whitehouse.gov]
webcams in congress: https://petitions.whitehouse.gov/petition/we-demand-surveillance-technology-congress-and-white-house/C3c6ZsgY [whitehouse.gov]
Re: (Score:2)
Organ donor opt-out...
You cant be serious. The idea that the state has default rights to your body after your death is pretty awful, and Im a little astonished that a significant number of people think its OK to stake claims over the bodies of the deceased.
Why not have a law that says "if you dont opt out, your children become property of the state", too? Same basic premise, if anyone REALLY wants to keep custody they can just opt out, right?
Re: (Score:2)
Organ donor opt-out...
You cant be serious. The idea that the state has default rights to your body after your death is pretty awful, and Im a little astonished that a significant number of people think its OK to stake claims over the bodies of the deceased.
A valid concern. I wonder if any other large body of people have ever tried anything like that and made it work without abuses? Humm....
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Organ_donation#Opt-in_vs._opt-out [wikipedia.org]
"As of 2010, 24 European countries have some form of presumed consent (opt-out) system...."
At least a few tens of millions of people think it is not such a bad idea. There certainly are not a lot of horror stories coming out of it. Maybe these EU countries just have better governments than we do? More trustworthy
Re: (Score:2)
Your comment about "women and gays" makes it difficult to take seriously your more valid criticisms. While I suppose it might increase sales to some demographics, those demographics usually are not the ones with large problems with physical violence already. Getting guns out of the hands of "angry young men" would likely be a net positive even if some of those guns were shifted to "people who like the color pink".
I doubt, but would be interested to see any research, that any changes to the colour of a gun w
Re: (Score:2)
I already have an account but I didn't know about this petition, so for me it was just a quick log in to access the "sign petition" button...
Re: (Score:2)
I did it a while back, so I can bitch and moan whenever I want. My voice counts!
False Equivalence (Score:3)
"...have the Librarian of Congress revisit that decision" != "Make Cell Phone Unlocking Legal"
That is all.
Re:False Equivalence (Score:5, Informative)
"...have the Librarian of Congress revisit that decision" != "Make Cell Phone Unlocking Legal"
That is all.
The summary is poor. The petition itself actually states "We ask that the White House ask the Librarian of Congress to rescind this decision, and failing that, champion a bill that makes unlocking permanently legal."
Re: (Score:2)
"...have the Librarian of Congress revisit that decision" != "Make Cell Phone Unlocking Legal"
That is all.
The summary is poor. The petition itself actually states "We ask that the White House ask the Librarian of Congress to rescind this decision, and failing that, champion a bill that makes unlocking permanently legal."
Still.
It's my experience that "ask" does not get you too far when it comes to bureaucrats. "We demand that the White House demand the Librarian of Congress to..." would, IMO, be far more effective; especially if you throw in something about First Amendment grounds.
Re: (Score:3)
"...have the Librarian of Congress revisit that decision" != "Make Cell Phone Unlocking Legal"
That is all.
The summary is poor. The petition itself actually states "We ask that the White House ask the Librarian of Congress to rescind this decision, and failing that, champion a bill that makes unlocking permanently legal."
... "We demand that the White House demand the Librarian of Congress to..." would, IMO, be far more effective; ....
It would not be more effective, since the White House has only ever pledged to respond to petitions that reach the threshold, not to take any action whatsoever. The petitions are not binding in any way. The WH raised the threshold for comment only because once the site became popular, it was trivially easy to reach that number for stupid things, and the WH didn't want to have to comment on stupid things.
Re: (Score:2)
The WH raised the threshold for comment only because once the site became popular, it was trivially easy to reach that number for stupid things, and the WH didn't want to have to comment on stupid things.
I do not see why raise the threshold -- they do not even always respond to your petition. Sometimes it is just a random response. The petition to "Abolish TSA" could have gotten a response "We feel your pain, but TSA is too important" or "We hear you, but we don't think TSA is so bad".
Instead, the answer was "TSA is awesome and has big plans for next 10 years" without as much as referencing the petition text in a meaningfulness way. How much work is it to copy-paste a response from somewhere?
Re: (Score:3)
"We demand that the White House demand the Librarian of Congress to..." would, IMO, be far more effective; especially if you throw in something about First Amendment grounds.
Given that this petition system does nothing to force anyone to do anything but "respond", and given that past "responses" have been along the lines of the one from TSA regarding a petition to disband TSA ("TSA is great, we're doing great, thanks for asking, have a nice day."), you can 'demand' all you want, but you'll still get a nonresponsive response. You can even toss in a reference to eight of the ten amendments in the Bill of Rights and you won't improve the odds.
Re: (Score:2)
"this many people promise to vote your sorry ass out of office at the next election."
that might get some attention.
then again, I still doubt it.
its not 11k signatures that are needed, its 11 million dollars given to the power brokers in washington.
lets be honest here. this is about money, not freedom.
Re: (Score:2)
100,000 votes spread across 50 states? Half of whom (statistically) werent voting for you anyways, and half of the remainder who will vote for you no matter what you do?
Yea, Im sure that will make a huge difference.
Re: (Score:3)
Saying "demand" when you have no power to enforce your demand just annoys them, making them less likely to respond well to what is actually a request.
It also reduces the number of signatures you'll get, due to people who think such language implies the speaker is impolite and/or a twit refusing to do something that makes them feel like an impolite twit themselves.
Asking nicely - with a large number of people asking - may convince the bureaucrats that there is enough popular support for the position that it
Re: (Score:2)
there's no 'convincing'. you think they don't get it? they get it.
but the carriers have the 're-election money' and that's ALL that matters.
the carriers saw more lock-in and they bought all the support in washington needed.
you think your little "I want" and "its not right!" matters?
really?
politics is mostly about getting re-elected and getting paid. it hasn't been about justice for as long as I can remember.
grow up, people. what you WANT does not matter. I'm not even sure it ever really did, but it su
Ya, that'll work... (Score:2)
Right, because it was the "bureaucrats" who made this decision, not the politicians.
And, of course, a demand from 0.0003% of the population will cause them to spring into action to meet your demands...
Don't care (Score:3, Interesting)
It's my phone, I paid for it and I honestly don't give two shits if some asshole in congress thinks I can't do what I want with something I own. Go ahead, make it illegal, fill up the jails and prisons just a little bit more. My guess is that a small handful of people might get into trouble over this, but the vast majority of us will do what we want WITH OUR OWN PROPERTY.
Re:Don't care (Score:5, Insightful)
Better still, make *locking* phones illegal. It's anti-competitive and should have been outlawed right from the start.
Re: (Score:2)
Exactly..
Locking phones is immoral and their claimed reasons for doing it are completely ridiculous. Contract law already provides protection against customers buying subsidised phones and then refusing to pay for the rest of the contract.
Re: (Score:2)
If you truly paid for your phone then it is perfectly legal to jailbreak it. If you have a subsidized phone that you only partially paid for you can't just take it from your provider and hop to another network at will until you've paid off your debt to them for the phone.
The only problem with the way things stand now is that no cell providers provide a clear line in the sand when your subsidy has been paid off since everything is run with telephone company accounting practices (heavily stilted in their favo
Re:Don't care (Score:5, Informative)
If you truly paid for your phone then it is perfectly legal to jailbreak it. If you have a subsidized phone that you only partially paid.
Not true. In exchange for the subsidy, you entered a legally binding contract that requires you to pay for service for a limited time period. The phone is yours. The state even requires you to pay sales tax on the unsubsidized price at the time of purchase. It is this contract that ties you to the carrier, typically for two years. The lock is completely unnecessary for ensuring that the carrier gets paid and only serves to obstruct the owner from using their own device in any way that doesn't bring extra profit to the carrier above and beyond the required service agreement.
Re: (Score:2)
It gives the makers & carriers the power under DMCA to issue a take-down against any site/service/software that allows or helps people to unlock their phones.
By pushing such sites/services/software/chatrooms/instructionpages/etc underground, DMCAing them whenever they get too prominent, it makes it much harder for normal people to unlock their own phones. Defacto enforcement of the law against normal people, by taking away the tools that allow them to commit their "crime".
Petition starter here (Score:5, Interesting)
Re: (Score:2)
Or, it could help raise the number of required people "signing" the petition to be doubled! They will find ways to not listen! :)
P.S. I did sign it, and have signed others in the past. But I really think it's a sort of "let's make the people think th
FTFY (Score:2)
White House Petition To Get Staff Flunky To Reiterate That Cell Phone Unlocking Remains Illegal Needs 11,000 Signatures
Re: (Score:2)
Sure, but then at least you've forced an elected official instead of a bureaucrat to take an official position on the matter. The mechanics of the US's democracy suck, but low-grade feedback is better than no feedback on terrible decisions.
Re: (Score:2)
Sure, but then at least you've forced an elected official instead of a bureaucrat to take an irrelevant position on the matter.
FTFY. Or perhaps you haven't heard of Separation of Powers [wikipedia.org]? The best that could happen is that an Executive-branch bureaucrat politely asks a Legislative-branch ("Library of Congress", get it?) to change his mind. And the Legislative bureaucrat politely declines. End of discussion.
Let's hear it for participatory democratic government!
Re: (Score:2)
The Librarian is nominated by the President, and our current one is over 80 years old.
Obama will probably be appointing a new Librarian of Congress, as well as several Supreme Court justices.
petitions don't write laws (Score:5, Insightful)
Are there any examples of a "We the people" petition actually doing anything even if successful?
Re:petitions don't write laws (Score:5, Funny)
Are there any examples of a "We the people" petition actually doing anything even if successful?
We got the beer recipe. [whitehouse.gov] Hooray.
Re: (Score:3)
This isn't the white house's job. (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
It's legal in Canada... (Score:2)
Barring possible contract violations with your cell phone provider, I can't see any reason you couldn't take your cell phone into Canada, unlock it there, and then return.
It's not illegal in the USA to possess an unlocked cell phone, and as I said, it's legal in Canada to unlock cell phones.
I mean, if you can, say, travel to some country where, for example, marijuana is legal, and take advantage of that fact while vacationing and then return without being held legally accountable for that act upon reen
Re: (Score:2)
If it were that simple they could just go to a Canadian website, but the problem is the codes. Excepting a few models where the codes are cracked, an individual code is needed for each phone. The codes come from the manufacturer, and it is the manufacturer in consultation with the carrier that sells the codes to third parties.
When they made 'unlocking' illegal in the U.S. they were essentially banning those codes. This will probably result in the codes no longer being sold to the 3rd parties, so you won
Re: (Score:2)
Going to a Canadian website while in the USA would still involve unlocking it while in the USA, and thus still subject to USA laws.
When you travel to another country, you are subject to the laws of the country you are visiting, not your own country's laws, except to the extent that you do not return with anything that your country prohibits.
As I said.... it is entirely legal in the USA to own an unlocked cell phone, and it's not illegal in Canada to unlock one, and the law does not apparently actually
Re: (Score:2)
Are you suggesting that the TSA perform marijuana usage scans upon reentry to the USA?
Joking, sort of.
Re: (Score:2)
No... I'm simply stating that it's not illegal for people to do things that may be illegal in their home country when said things are legal in the country that they actually *ARE* in.
It's not illegal to unlock cell phones in Canada. It's not illegal to possess an unlocked cell phone in the USA. It's not really not that difficult a concept.
Re: (Score:2)
Not quite... if you travel to Asia and have sex with a 12 year old prostitute while you're there, the US *will* in fact prosecute you for it if it finds out. California arrests 18-20 year old adults for alcohol possession all the time -- even if the actual consumption occurred in Mexico -- if it can legally get its hands on a blood or breath sample somehow, and determines that they have alcohol in their bloodstream (in CA, Florida, and quite a few other states, having detectable alcohol in your bloodstream
I'm still waiting (Score:2)
Umm, what? (Score:2)
"It reduces consumer choice, and decreases the resale value of devices that consumers have paid for in full. "
These are in direct conflict with each other. If you've paid for a device in full, you're not under contract.
Really, all the cell phone companies need to do to swing things in their favor is to state that if you buy a subsidized phone, it remains the property of the telco until you've satisfied your contractual commi
Re: (Score:2)
If you've paid for a device in full, you're not under contract.
A device that you've fully paid for doesn't make/receive phone calls without a contract.
Re: (Score:2)
AT&T and Verizon are prohibited from leasing phones to customers. In theory, Sprint, T-Mobile, MetroPCS, and US Cellular aren't (they aren't bound by the consent decree that ordered AT&T's breakup & prohibited lease arrangements going forward... AT&T and Verizon are.) The prohibition against leasing was reaffirmed multiple times against BellSouth Mobility in the early 90s (back when a Motorola DynaTac used to cost $3,995).
Meanwhile, southwards... (Score:5, Interesting)
Here in Brazil, it is illegal to sell locked phones.
What for anyway? (Score:2)
I mean, if you buy a "subsidized" phone and agree on a contract for two years or so, with monthly payments you have to pay if you use their network or not, what do they gain by not allowing you to unlock it and use it with another carrier (and pay for this also)? You're still paying them anyway.
Also a petition for a people's FCC chairman (Score:4, Informative)
https://petitions.whitehouse.gov/petition/appoint-susan-crawford-fcc-chairman/73mtqt0q [whitehouse.gov] ,
Susan Crawford, law school professor and author of Captive Audience: The Telecom Industry and Monopoly in the New Guilded Age, says “Truly high-speed wired Internet access is as basic to innovation, economic growth, social communication, and the country’s competitiveness as electricity was a century ago, but a limited number of Americans have access to it, many can’t afford it, and the country has handed control of it over to Comcast and a few other companies.”
In a recent TV interview, she pointed out high speed access in Hong Kong costs a fraction of what it does in New York city, because the US providers don't enter each other's markets. She wants to change that.
http://billmoyers.com/segment/susan-crawford-on-why-u-s-internet-access-is-slow-costly-and-unfair/ [billmoyers.com]
Re: (Score:2)
Susan Crawford, law school professor and author of Captive Audience: The Telecom Industry and Monopoly in the New Guilded Age,
It's Gilded Age, not Guilded Age.
A guilded age might be a nice thing to have.
How Effectual Are Online Petitions? (Score:2)
Just 11,000 more signatures... (Score:2)
...and your petition can be *officially* ignored by the White House!
Who are we kidding? (Score:2)
If this is anything like previous petitions, I expect the response to be farmed out to an cell phone carrier exec who will ignore the petition's content and instead talk about how much they are spending on building out their network. Bonus points if they end on a riff about how the DMCA protects consumer rights and why ACTA, SOPA, and PIPA would be great for the American public (if we could only get them passed... contact your congressperson!).
Why can't I vote in private (Score:2, Insightful)
I can vote in private for just about everything, but to sign this I need to sign in? No thank you.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:3)
No, read the law. The executive (specifically, the Librarian of Congress) has the power to issue exemptions to the anti-circumvention provisions of the DMCA, which they did 6 years ago to allow cell phone unlocking. They then declined to renew that exemption.
LOC makes laws? (Score:2)
Since when is the LOC or any staff thereof any kind of legislative body? Who granted them any authority to regulate, well, anything outside of the Library itself? I could understand the FCC issuing a ruling like this, as cellphones are very much within their purview, but the LOC?
What did I miss?
Do these petitions actually lead to any action? (Score:3)
I read the FAQ, and the only thing the whitehouse says they'll do if the petition reaches the threshold is "respond" to it, which so far seems to be little more than long-winded non-answers. I get the feeling that this is intended to keep us preoccupied with the hope they'll do something so we don't notice that they don't actually do anything.
Meanwhile in the UK... (Score:2)
I live in the UK, it has never come across to me that unlocking mobile phone is illegal. In fact the service providers here tend to provide instructions on how to unlock your phone. e.g. http://giffgaff.com/unlock [giffgaff.com]
Why do they lock phones *on contract* in the US? (Score:2)
Sorry, not getting the logic here, why do they lock on contract phones over there?
In Australia, in general, if you're on contract, they don't bother locking the device. They don't need to, you're on a contract. Who cares if you use another provider, they are still getting there money every month.
Pre-paid devices are nearly always locked though, as they don't have any hold over you.
GO SLASHDOT (Score:3)
Looks like Slashdot still holds some of its power. 100,000 was reached sometime this morning 2/21/2013.
No time for that (Score:2)
Were all too busy with the change.org petition against Oracle.
Re: (Score:2)
I dunno. He proposed the system. There's nothing wrong with using technology to create a little tiny ignorable amount of direct democracy in an otherwise quite dysfunctional republic. I don't think anyone is under the impression that petitions fix everything, but it may allow for correcting the occasional oversight.
Re: (Score:2)
I dunno. He proposed the system. There's nothing wrong with using technology to create a little tiny ignorable amount of direct democracy in an otherwise quite dysfunctional republic. I don't think anyone is under the impression that petitions fix everything, but it may allow for correcting the occasional oversight.
1) There is no direct democracy here. They only need to respond. Not change.
2) There is no oversight here. They know what they do and who they answer to.
There exists no real responsible to the people government here any more.
They give out a few more freebies and make a few more people believe that our freedoms are Given to us by the government and then they can take the last of the guns and do as they please.
Re: (Score:2)
Well, enjoy your political nihilism.
Re: (Score:3)
answer is easy, stop selling locked phone at $20 with a footnot with a 70 years contract. Or include a condition in the 2 year contract that there is a huge fee per remaining month if you decide to cancel your contract. But why keep it locked?
Re: (Score:2)
Because subscriber revenue stinks. Carriers want to have that juicy roaming revenue. And they know if you're on contract, and you unlock your phone, they're denied that revenue as you'd just buy a local SIM.
No, the best way would be to force carriers at the end of a c
Re: (Score:2)
As a practical matter, it's *impossible* to buy a brand new Sprint phone from an authorized dealer with no strings attached -- at *any* price, subsidized or not. They literally aren't allowed to let you walk out the door with a new phone that isn't activated and associated with a current Sprint account. The official excuse is that the phone's firmware is exclusively licensed from qualxomm & others for use on Sprint, so they can't sell it to use on MetroPCS or US Cellular -- not even at full price.
That's
Re: (Score:2)
No, the best way would be to force carriers at the end of a contract (which includes upgrades if you keep your old phone) to give you the unlock code as part of the contract expiration. Same goes if you decide to buy it outright with no contract - the carrier must give you the code ot unlock it.
If you have a contract, why does the phone need to be locked in the first place? Banning locking seems to be vastly easier than requiring unlock codes which most people won't know what to do with.
Re:Unlocking of cell phones (Score:4, Informative)
Do you know why their doing this?It's because of the problem of so many people getting cells/droids under a contarcted agreement then deciding they want to switch to a diferent carrier without having to pay a large fe to get out of the original contract so I can understand why the major company's want this law.The people themselves are the reason this is happening,it is not the fault of the providers whatsoever,it is the fault of the users
If you get out of your contract agreement, you're going to pay a fee which is dependent on how long you have to go on your contract, regardless of whether you can unlock your phone or not. The fee is for breaking the contract, not to unlock your phone.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Oh, so stupid contracts that disadvantage a huge business over the customer need criminal protections for said huge business? Sheesh
[And that's even assuming such a "disadvantage exists - which it doesn't.]
But lets just assume it does.
So, if I'm "too large to fail" I'll get the government to enact criminal penalties to help me enforce a stupid contract I made, outside of the civil court system? This is no different than getting "Vinny," with his bat, to break the knees of anyone who renegs on a deal nad cut
Re: (Score:3)
And what about when the people doing this purchase a dozen subsidized phones, unlock them and resell them, and then simply refuse to pay the fee for breaching the contract?
What the hell? What about people who enter any contract, and then breach it? Contract law is a thing, go to the courts. If the problem is so widespread that this isn't cost effective, then that business model is broken, and I guess it's just not going to be worth it to you to offer subsidized phones.
Try offering another incentive instead, like a lower monthly plan if under contract.
We the people don't owe you a law to make your business model work.
Re: (Score:2)
And what about when the people doing this purchase a dozen subsidized phones, unlock them and resell them, and then simply refuse to pay the fee for breaching the contract? Or what if they use a fake credit card for the initial purchase? Or use a valid credit card, then simply stop paying it and leave the CC company and the carrier to try to chase after them with collection agencies to get, at most, pennies on the dollar?
Are you fcking serious? They will get royally screwed just like when serfs anywhere try to get a little bit of money back from the rich.
There are plenty of things to worry about in the world but one of the few things we don't have to worry about is the ability of large corporations to put the screws to the little guy. Look at the robo-signing fiasco. Thousands of people (or more) have lost their homes and all the investment they put into them without ever having missed a payment.
The very last th
Re: (Score:2)
"It is the fault of the users." Are you just trolling? Because if you're not, you don't have the slightest understanding of this situation.
If you want to switch to a different carrier, you DO, in fact, have to pay a large fee to get out of the original contract. If you don't pay it, it's handled like any other legitimate debt.
If you paid full price for a phone, and don't have a contract, why would a corporation get to tell you what you can and can't do with the phone after you've paid for it?
Re: (Score:2)
> If you paid full price for a phone, and don't have a contract, why would a corporation get to tell you what
> you can and can't do with the phone after you've paid for it?
Sprint's usual excuse is that the firmware on the phone was licensed for use only on Sprint, so using the phone on Verizon, MetroPCS, US Cellular, or BSNL (in India) is tantamount to software piracy. Of course, the only reason the firmware license specifies that the license is only for use on Sprint is because Sprint *itself* insist
Re:Unlocking of cell phones (Score:5, Insightful)
Do you know why [they're] doing this?[ ]It's because of the problem of so many people getting cells/droids under a [contracted] agreement[,] then deciding they want to switch to a [different] carrier without having to pay a large [fee] to get out of the original contract[,] so I can understand why the major [companies] want this law.
Whew, much better - that poorly typed shit is hard for me to read.
Here's the issue with your argument - cellular carriers already charge hefty fees for early contract termination, so your main talking point here is demonstrably false.
Also, this "law," which BTW isn't really a law as the Librarian of Congress is not a fucking Legislator , merely adds insult to injury by preventing everyone from unlocking their phones, up to and including folks who unwittingly bought a locked phone outright (it happens), and people like me that actually fulfilled our contractual obligation, and now possess a fully paid for, albeit nearly obsolete, device.
The people themselves are the reason this is happening,it is not the fault of the providers whatsoever,it is the fault of the users
Psychologists refer to this sort of behavior as victim blaming, [wikipedia.org] and is oft employed exclusively by narcissistic assholes.
Re: (Score:2)
albeit nearly obsolete
IMO, a phone is not obsolete so long as it is capable of making calls.
Re:i did (Score:5, Funny)
I see. Your time is better spent bitching about said Internet petition on Slashdot.
Re: (Score:2)
Typically at the end of a lease, you need to return the property to the owner or buy it outright. If we're going to compare apples to apples, the way the cell phone companies treat this is as a loan, similar to when you purchase a car and get a bank note for the balance.
In this respect, if I don't owe the cell company anything at the end - I'd really consider it more of a loan than a lease. Especially with the early termination - they don't want the phone back, they just want their cut of subsidizing the
Re: (Score:2)
No - the phone is consideration for your side of the contract. It's your phone. You're also bound to a cell service contract because you took the subsidized phone. Two separate things. The need to pay off the subsidy is a part of the contract, not part of your ownership of the phone. The contract is not tied to the phone.
Imagine they gave you $500 for signing the contract instead of a phone. Is that $500 yours to spend immediately? Yes!