IPhone Contract Is Long and Legally Murky


Recommended Posts

IPhone Contract Is Long and Legally Murky

David Kravets icon_email.gif 07.20.07 | 2:00 AM

Apple CEO Steve Jobs proudly proclaimed the iPhone one of the most intuitive devices ever made. Not so for the iPhone's terms-of-service contract, which at 17,000 words is one of the longest and most complex ever to accompany a wireless gadget, legal experts say.

No one reads such things, least of all early adopters eager to own the summer's most-lusted-after product. So Wired News has done the hard work for you. We read it not just once but several times, with the help of a few good lawyers.

"I think there's no chance whatsoever that a layperson would understand it and I doubt they could get through it. I think most lawyers wouldn't understand it either," says Fred von Lohmann, a staff attorney with the Electronic Frontier Foundation who in a past career crafted licensing service agreements for a living.

An Apple representative declined to answer questions or comment.

The good news: The document consists mostly of boilerplate that is standard in most wireless contracts, and contains no real surprises. Its unusual length stems from the fact that the iPhone is bundled with several services, each of which has its own licensing agreement.

The bad news: The iPhone contract may not be the last word in overly long and complex user agreements. Terms-of-service contracts promise to grow even more dense, legal experts warn, making them even more difficult to understand than they already are.

That's a problem, because even standard contracts now contain some legally questionable provisions that you should be aware of regardless of the phone and plan you use -- for example, regarding reverse engineering and arbitration.

The iPhone contract is unusual in bundling many separate agreements into a single contract. It comes in six parts, including agreements regarding AT&T's phone service, the iPhone software, the iTunes software, the use of Google Maps and of YouTube in addition to a user's consent that an e-mail from Apple "will satisfy any legal communication requirements." (Click to read the AT&T agreement, plus the other five agreements.)

Phone services typically charge roaming fees for connecting outside of the plan's footprint. This can feel like a gotcha for customers who are not fully aware of how roaming works. For iPhone users, this risk is detailed in the AT&T section, where the agreement states, "Substantial charges may be incurred if phone is taken out of the (United States) even if no services are intentionally used."

Roaming charges might apply to incoming calls, and will be levied against overseas iPhone users even when viewing messages in the gadget's "visual voicemail" feature, AT&T representatives said.

"That is a data service, so you can be incurring data charges as well. We just want to tell people when you go outside the United States, there's additional costs involved," says Mark Siegel, an AT&T spokesman. The terms of the iPhone agreement, he adds, are largely the same as any other phone using AT&T's service.

I am sure Apple fanboys will find some reason to defend this :wacko:

The iPhone agreement also says Apple may monitor users' iPhones "to verify compliance with terms of this license." It notes that Apple may collect technical information regarding users' iPhones, computers, software and peripherals, as long as such information is not used in a form that personally identifies individual users.

Source: Wired

Edited by dhan
Phone services typically charge roaming fees for connecting outside of the plan's footprint. This can feel like a gotcha for customers who are not fully aware of how roaming works. For iPhone users, this risk is detailed in the AT&T section, where the agreement states, "Substantial charges may be incurred if phone is taken out of the (United States) even if no services are intentionally used."
There's a simple solution if you're going out of the US, get the international plan for $6 a month. And if you're only going out once, get it for that one month and then cancel it. That is a feature of plan and can be canceled at anytime.
The iPhone agreement also says Apple may monitor users' iPhones "to verify compliance with terms of this license." It notes that Apple may collect technical information regarding users' iPhones, computers, software and peripherals, as long as such information is not used in a form that personally identifies individual users.
Big deal. I don't see a problem with that, TiVo does it. People are way to paranoid IMO.

huh?

Phone services typically charge roaming fees for connecting outside of the plan's footprint. This can feel like a gotcha for customers who are not fully aware of how roaming works. For iPhone users, this risk is detailed in the AT&T section, where the agreement states, "Substantial charges may be incurred if phone is taken out of the (United States) even if no services are intentionally used."

thats normal for any mobile phone though, so I don't know why their picking at apple / AT&T because of that

huh?

thats normal for any mobile phone though, so I don't know why their picking at apple / AT&T because of that

Yeah my phone plan says I can't take it out of the country either with out significant charges... hint, if you are going out of the country, get a world plan!

OK for all those who say I have nothing to hide - please install cameras in every room of your house and start streaming it onto a public website - just coz u have nothing to hide

also especially make sure that you install cameras in bathrooms with large tubs becoz they can potentially be used to mix dangerous contraband chemicals and since you are not doing that you have nothing to hide

Can we have an iPhone subforum created here on BPN, because all these bogus iPhone "news" threads are starting to crowd out the real news. Could there be a bigger piece of overhyped garbage than the iPhone? Do we need to have minute-by-minute updates on every tiny occurrence for the iPhone?

Can we have an iPhone subforum created here on BPN, because all these bogus iPhone "news" threads are starting to crowd out the real news. Could there be a bigger piece of overhyped garbage than the iPhone? Do we need to have minute-by-minute updates on every tiny occurrence for the iPhone?

I agree 100%

Can we have an iPhone subforum created here on BPN, because all these bogus iPhone "news" threads are starting to crowd out the real news. Could there be a bigger piece of overhyped garbage than the iPhone? Do we need to have minute-by-minute updates on every tiny occurrence for the iPhone?

I agree :yes:

:whistle:

Its the silent majority, that, allows this situation to continue!

That's the "Catch 22"! Closing their eyes while they sign, and, whistling while making their calls. Always :whistle:, there's no opening for any real knowledge to get through. therefore. we spin our wheels trying to inform the :whistle:.

Kudos for those who spend their finite free time to inform the non :whistle: !!!

Regards, FaQuuu

Can we have an iPhone subforum created here on BPN, because all these bogus iPhone "news" threads are starting to crowd out the real news. Could there be a bigger piece of overhyped garbage than the iPhone? Do we need to have minute-by-minute updates on every tiny occurrence for the iPhone?

Yeah, overhyped garbage!!!

That's 2!

Spinning Wheels, FaQuuu

I am sure Apple fanboys will find some reason to defend this :wacko:

Source: Wired

...

The terms of the iPhone agreement, he adds, are largely the same as any other phone using AT&T's service.

...

Did you mean AT&T fanboy?

Anyway, it's more of the same crap, crummy contracts aren't an iPhone only thing, I was on a 2 year contract for my phone, and I was being charged 22c a KB for data.

I am waiting to see what kind of details will be in the UK contract because I know that I will be getting of these on launch day just want to know what I am letting myself in for :unsure:

This topic is now closed to further replies.
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Posts

    • ChartNet’s 1.7 million synthetic samples let compact open-source models outperform GPT-4o on every chart task   A team from MIT and the MIT-IBM Computing Research Lab has built a training dataset that solves one of the most persistent gaps in enterprise AI: the inability of even the best commercial models to reliably read a chart...... https://www.techtimes.com/articles/317752/20260604/ai-chart-understanding-breakthrough-mit-ibm-dataset-lets-small-models-beat-gpt-4o.htm  
    • BTW DXVK is also available on Windows and offers similar benefits like on Linux when it comes to performance, at least in some titles. The Raceroom racing sim for example even offers DXVK as one of its officially supported options and it can achieve ridiculous improvements in certain situations, like quite literally doubling (or more) the framerates
    • Nvidia GeForce NOW to support 18 more games in June, including Gothic 1 Remake by Pulasthi Ariyasinghe The start of a new month means Nvidia is also preparing a whole month of additions to its GeForce NOW supported games list. The cloud gaming platform received its first update of June today, revealing games like Jurassic World Evolution 3 and Gothic 1 Remake for the service, while at the same time revealing what's incoming in the next few weeks too. Here are the games joining GeForce NOW's supported list this week: Jurassic World Evolution 3 (New release on Xbox, available on Game Pass) Fatekeeper (New release on Steam, available June 2) House Flipper Remastered Collection (New release on Steam, available June 4) Pro Cycling Manager 26 (New release on Steam, available June 4) GOALS (New release on Steam, available June 4) Gothic 1 Remake (New release on Steam, available June 5) NTE: Neverness to Everness (Launcher) The Outer Worlds: Spacer's Choice Edition (Steam and Xbox, available on Game Pass) Tomb Raider I-III Remastered (Epic Games Store) XCOM: Enemy Unknown (Steam) Nvidia also plans to add support for these games during the rest of June, though more titles will probably land as weeks go by too: STARSEEKER: Astroneer Expeditions (New release on Steam, June 11) SpaceCraft (New release on Steam, June 11) Denshattack! (New release on Steam and Xbox, available on Game Pass, June 17) The Adventures of Elliot: The Millennium Tales (New release on Steam, June 18) Dark Scrolls (New release on Steam, June 22) Monopoly: Star Wars Heroes vs. Villains (New release on Steam and Ubisoft, June 30) Farever (Steam) FATAL FURY: City of the Wolves (Steam) Keep in mind that, unlike subscription services like Game Pass or EA Play, a copy of a game must be owned by the GeForce NOW member (or at least have a license via PC Game Pass) to start playing via Nvidia's cloud servers. There is also a limit to how many hours subscribers can use the service per month.
    • The useful lapdogs  
  • Recent Achievements

    • One Month Later
      nothanks earned a badge
      One Month Later
    • One Month Later
      B2Proxy earned a badge
      One Month Later
    • One Year In
      MadMung0 earned a badge
      One Year In
    • Week One Done
      jefred earned a badge
      Week One Done
    • Apprentice
      JoeyNeo went up a rank
      Apprentice
  • Popular Contributors

    1. 1
      +primortal
      476
    2. 2
      PsYcHoKiLLa
      230
    3. 3
      Skyfrog
      79
    4. 4
      FloatingFatMan
      68
    5. 5
      Michael Scrip
      58
  • Tell a friend

    Love Neowin? Tell a friend!