Less than a week after the US Library of Congress established the “jailbreaking” of Apple iPhones as “fair use”, a plucky hacker on Monday launched a browser-based service to do just that.
JailbreakMe 2.0 will “jailbreak” — unlock from restrictions imposed by the manufacturer — the Apple iPhone, iPod Touch and iPad when visited from the device. Last week the Copyright Office at the Library of Congress ruled in favour of the Electronic Frontier Foundation in deeming that the jailbreaking of mobile devices is not illegal, an argument that Apple contested.
During the hearing, a spokesperson for the EFF estimated that “more than a million” iPhone owners have already unlocked their devices “in order to change wireless providers”. Now customers climbing the walls of Apple’s well-documented “walled garden” approach to devices could easily become unburdened, with the number of jailbroken devices likely to significantly increase. Before browser-based unlocking — JailbreakMen is thought to be the first website to offer such a service — users had to download an application to their computer desktop and go from there.
Early problems are being reported by those using the service. At the time of writing, both MMS and Facetime (the latter iPhone 4 only) are said to be disabled.
Apple has always insisted restrictions placed on its devices — such as those that disallow certain applications entry to the App Store — are necessary to protect the consumer, warning that jailbreaking voids a device’s warranty.
A statement released by the company after last week’s case read: “Apple’s goal has always been to insure that our customers have a great experience with their iPhone and we know that jailbreaking can severely degrade the experience. As we’ve said before, the vast majority of customers do not jailbreak their iPhones as this can violate the warranty and can cause the iPhone to become unstable and not work reliably.”
Unlocked Apple devices can be returned to out-of-the-box state by clicking “Restore” when connected to iTunes.
The legality of jailbreaking in the UK is less clear than that in the US because of the lack of legal precedent set inside the EU. Andres Guadamuz, an IT law lecturer at the University of Edinburgh, told Wired UK: “Although you might be breaking Apple’s terms and conditions and voiding your warranty, I just can’t see how a judge would rule against it.” – guardian.co.uk