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Teenagers now bond over 'Jailbreaking'

Elliot Harrison   on 08 July 2009 - 23:13, updated 09 July 2009 - 04:43 · 32 comments & 8682 views

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This piece of news takes me back to when I was a boy at school. I remember clearly that I was easily categorized as one of the 'geeks'. A title that I didn't mind having, because as we all know, it surreptitiously makes us way cooler than all of the popular kids, my 'gang' just didn't know it back then and neither did the cool kids for that matter.

Anyway, this great story comes straight from the website of the Wall Street Journal and tells the story of how a teenager by the name of Ari Weinstein foiled Apple's most talented software engineers and personally annoyed head honcho Steve Jobs. But first, a little definition of the term 'Jailbreaking' for the readers who may be unaware:

Jailbreaking refers to the installing of unapproved software on Apple's iPod Touch and iPhone which enables people to download a range of these unapproved programs onto their chosen device.

Jailbreaking software gives users access to applications which are, of course, not accessible t the more legitimate user. Such applications include ad blocking services for the hand held based web browsers or applications which allow the device to double as a modem.

Ari's mission this summer is not to take advantage of the good weather or spend his time hanging out with his friends; instead he has devised a loose knit team of hacker teenangers to probe the software on Apple's handheld devices for flaws. According to the article, Ari and his band spent up to six hours a day checking the software for security holes and this weekend one of his crew (named 'The Chronic Dev Team') has released the jailbreaking software that have been hard at work on. Despite the program only being a test version according to Ari, over a quarter of a million people have already visited his site to take a look.

This little hacker had early beginnings, and if you watch the small video on the article's page, you will see (in argument with his mum) that he started his love affair with computers when he was as young as two years of age. Properly hacking since he was eleven, Ari states that:

"Coding and testing things that may or may not work, and figuring things out, is a really rewarding experience."

An Apple spokeswoman has made an announcement condemning the practice:

"The vast majority of customers do not jailbreak their iPhones, and for good reason, these modifications not only violate the warranty, they also cause the iPhone to become unstable and not work reliably."

It makes Jobs angry too, referring to the war against hackers as a 'Cat and mouse game', though admits that its Apple's job to prevent them from breaking in. I am inclined to agree. Jobs takes his point further though, and Apple have now filed a twenty seven page statement to the U.S. Copyright office arguing that the modification of a phone's software is in violation of the Digital Millennium Copyright Act. The ruling as to this issue is expected this autumn.

Ari takes the more ethical side of this seriously though, and has a wise head on such young shoulders. He has researched the finer points of the act and regularly liaises with his lawyer who works for him on a voluntary basis.

Already having made 'thousands' from his downloads with users donating appreciative funds for support; Ari seems to be one of the brightest sparks regarding coding for his age. Though ensures us all that his intent is not malicious in any way. "Apple doesn't have the right to tell me what I can put on my phone. I only do hacking which helps people." Said like a humble genius, I wish this helpful hacker the best of luck in the future. Though i sure as hell wish it was this cool to be a computer geek when I was his age

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(8 replies) #1 WAR-DOG on 09 Jul 2009 - 04:26
But is he any good with the girls?
#1.1 +jim2006193 on 09 Jul 2009 - 04:54
WAR-DOG said,
But is he any good with the girls?

lol
#1.2 ADSfull on 09 Jul 2009 - 04:54
Maybe with the MotherBoard
#1.3 Trauma on 09 Jul 2009 - 06:26
ADSfull said,
Maybe with the MotherBoard


oh snap!
#1.4 andrewbares on 09 Jul 2009 - 06:29
ADSfull said,
Maybe with the MotherBoard


Ha. Does he know how to "Hard Drive" her? lol. Old InfoTech joke.
#1.5 KavazovAngel on 09 Jul 2009 - 09:56
Its easy, man. Just put the stick in the right slot. :rofl:
#1.6 agreenbhm on 09 Jul 2009 - 10:58
ADSfull said,
Maybe with the MotherBoard


If he's smooth he can get the MotherBoard and DaughterBoard at the same time...
#1.7 +dead.cell on 09 Jul 2009 - 14:16
Hope he has a big enough USB stick.

He'll be doomed if he has a floppy...
#1.8 Lord Ba'al on 10 Jul 2009 - 00:23
WAR-DOG said,
But is he any good with the girls?

Now that's easy:

unzip; finger; mount; fsck; unmount; sleep;
(1 reply) #2 Owenw on 09 Jul 2009 - 05:04
This really is not a front page worthy article. Badly written, and about pretty much nothing. Sorry!
#2.1 TRC on 09 Jul 2009 - 05:09
Yeah I'm still trying to figure out what the point of this was.
(1 reply) #3 LiquidSolstice on 09 Jul 2009 - 05:27
Somehow, I don't really think this was a case of "bonding". It hardly talks about him having friends at all.
#3.1 cyberdrone2000 on 09 Jul 2009 - 05:44
Yeah.. I thought this was going to be an article about teen-run "jailbreaking" clubs, similar to those "app" clubs that have started to appear where people meet and discuss apps... except now it would be about jailbreaking and jailbroken apps, and would probably take place in or near school...

Very misleading, kind of pointless article.
(3 replies) #4 Cristanu on 09 Jul 2009 - 05:50
..."unapproved programs"...? that is a bit too harsh, but if you think about it for a second you'd think there's no freedom of choice or any liberty at all to do anything on an iphone that you're not supposed to do in the first place. Probably that's why my iphone 2g is kicking it appulous style
#4.1 Ravemaster on 09 Jul 2009 - 13:36
Many of those apps took long hard hours to create and complete. Why not buy them?
I bought most of my favorite apps (except the more expensive ones, those will have to wait until I either have more money or an iTunes gift card to spend).
Honestly, my opinion is Apple should implement a trial period system into the App Store. I know they won't, because then they can't rip off the developers when customers demand refunds.
#4.2 nevann on 09 Jul 2009 - 17:49
Ravemaster said,
Many of those apps took long hard hours to create and complete. Why not buy them?
I bought most of my favorite apps (except the more expensive ones, those will have to wait until I either have more money or an iTunes gift card to spend).
Honestly, my opinion is Apple should implement a trial period system into the App Store. I know they won't, because then they can't rip off the developers when customers demand refunds.


What apps? If you're referring to the apps on the appstore then these apps are still purchased by people who have jailbroken their phones. It's just they now have access to other applications through different sources
#4.3 Cristanu on 09 Jul 2009 - 19:57
Ravemaster, I totally agree with you and I'm 100% for rewarding all that hard work people put into, I do buy the apps that I use trough iTunes or directly from the phone, just that... I think nevann explained it better.
(1 reply) #5 liemfukliang on 09 Jul 2009 - 10:32
This prove that Mac OS X is not as safer than Windows. Remember that hacking a mobile OS is a lotttttt harder than normal version OS. If Iphone with Mac OS X mobile / lite version is hacked, that it will much more easy to hack the dekstop version.
#5.1 Jugalator on 09 Jul 2009 - 11:13
True that, but where does the proof lie? Because Windows Mobile is harder to hack around in?
(1 reply) #6 agreenbhm on 09 Jul 2009 - 10:59
But isn't there already an iPhone dev team that was at work at this?
#6.1 RangerLG on 09 Jul 2009 - 13:24
Yes, and they do not accept donations and don't seek publicity. I have far more respect for them than this kid who is trying to make a name for himself and making it to where Apple will severely lock down future phones.
#7 Ravemaster on 09 Jul 2009 - 13:43
"The vast majority of customers do not jailbreak their iPhones, and for good reason, these modifications not only violate the warranty, they also cause the iPhone to become unstable and not work reliably."

The instability only happens really if the user doesn't know what to do or not do (which isn't that hard), or when new firmwares are released and jailbroken apps are incompatible.
Honestly, I see jailbreaking as more advantage than disadvantage. Winterboard lets me fully customize the looks of the iPod Touch, SBSettings lets me make safe changes to the software, Categories lets me store apps in folders, etc etc. I'd hate to sort through all the apps in my iPod Touch without Categories/SpingJumps. Jailbreaking makes things simpler for me.

Also, jailbreaking my friend's iPhone let him have Mario sounds for several system sounds. And he called it dangerous until I did the jailbreaking for him. He loves his iPhone more now.
(1 reply) #8 Magallanes on 09 Jul 2009 - 14:11
IMHO Apple did it on purpose, the true loser is (or was) AT&T not Apple.

#8.1 Harbinger on 09 Jul 2009 - 14:22
Magallanes said,
IMHO Apple did it on purpose, the true loser is (or was) AT&T not Apple.


Obviously. Apple doesn't really care all that much if iPhones can be JBed or not. In the end, they actually get extra potential customers. I'm sure some people out there got one just to JB it and use it on their carrier. If JBing was impossible they just wouldn't have gotten one.
#9 nevann on 09 Jul 2009 - 17:53
Jailbreaking is not the same as unlocking
(2 replies) #10 C_Guy on 09 Jul 2009 - 17:54
Why is anyone giving children like this any attention? So he broke a phone, who cares? As soon as he does, Apple owes him absolutely nothing.

I only do hacking which helps people Typical "I can do whatever I want" teenager elitest attitude. The less you pay attention to them the sooner they grow up and move on.

There is nothing worth praising here.
#10.1 ChazZeromus on 10 Jul 2009 - 00:16
A self appraised image fronted out to everyone that makes him sleep at night. He's obviously aggregating all that he knew that short time for the purpose of establishing a bluff to create a sense of corporate fear upon companies and most importantly a failed iconic figure. Technology isn't a far island to reach with people like him. It's everywhere and easy to access, companies just don't realize how curious people are and take their product's security lightly. If anyone wants to praise anything upon the idiot, they can praise the amount of awareness that's raised from companies like apple to end these foolish acts. I still look at a piece of a turing machine as something that'll always have holes in it. Doesn't matter who you are, if you follow a person with a bogus figure, you'll eventually fall into a futile stand alone complex that will reduce you to an entity disregarded beyond your lifetime. Typical as it is, he's nothing of the many that've tried and in retrospect failed. Most teenagers by their nature think they're complex followers and find the most radical figure that their age corresponds to, feeling sympathy for a minuscule revolutionist. Simply despicable.
#10.2 ajua on 10 Jul 2009 - 08:01
ChazZeromus said,
A self appraised image fronted out to everyone that makes him sleep at night. He's obviously aggregating all that he knew that short time for the purpose of establishing a bluff to create a sense of corporate fear upon companies and most importantly a failed iconic figure. Technology isn't a far island to reach with people like him. It's everywhere and easy to access, companies just don't realize how curious people are and take their product's security lightly. If anyone wants to praise anything upon the idiot, they can praise the amount of awareness that's raised from companies like apple to end these foolish acts. I still look at a piece of a turing machine as something that'll always have holes in it. Doesn't matter who you are, if you follow a person with a bogus figure, you'll eventually fall into a futile stand alone complex that will reduce you to an entity disregarded beyond your lifetime. Typical as it is, he's nothing of the many that've tried and in retrospect failed. Most teenagers by their nature think they're complex followers and find the most radical figure that their age corresponds to, feeling sympathy for a minuscule revolutionist. Simply despicable.

What???
(2 replies) #11 daerid on 10 Jul 2009 - 16:41
Jobs takes his point further though, and Apple have now filed a twenty seven page statement to the U.S. Copyright office arguing that the modification of a phone's software is in violation of the Digital Millennium Copyright Act. The ruling as to this issue is expected this autumn.


This ****es me off so badly it's not even funny. I bought the phone. It's MINE. I should be able to do whatever the f**k I want with it. Period. As long as I'm not out there trying to make money off of Apple's work, then I should be able to use the damn thing for a dinner plate if I want. It's MINE. If I decide to hack it, or I decide to feed it to my dog, then nobody can tell me otherwise.
#11.1 itsthenewDC on 10 Jul 2009 - 17:46
I guess you can say the same about buying a house, right??.. There are still rules and regulations put in place even if you own something. Most people also don't buy the unsubsidized phone I bet, so they're not even fully paying for the phone, and therefore "have to" abide by contract rules and the like.
#11.2 nevann on 10 Jul 2009 - 19:45
itsthenewDC said,
I guess you can say the same about buying a house, right??.. There are still rules and regulations put in place even if you own something. Most people also don't buy the unsubsidized phone I bet, so they're not even fully paying for the phone, and therefore "have to" abide by contract rules and the like.


Even with the subsidised price you still own the phone. The contract you enter with the network operator is purely for the carrier service. They offer phones at a subsidised price to make the contract more appealing and raise the contract payments to offset the cost.
#12 coth on 10 Jul 2009 - 20:10
Personally don't care of DMCA as here in Russia the law narrowly says the person, who legally owns the program is able to decompile and change it.


So go to Russia if you want to unlock it legaly))

Last edited by coth on 10 Jul 2009 - 20:21

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