Droid X actually self-destructs if you try to mod it


Recommended Posts

Then why do you have to root in the first place?

It's just like jailbreak. The manufacturer puts limitations on the phone, but if you don't like the limitation, you can always void your warranty and root/jailbreak it.

Jailbreak and rooting a phone is not the same in the strict sense

Then why do you have to root in the first place?

It's just like jailbreak. The manufacturer puts limitations on the phone, but if you don't like the limitation, you can always void your warranty and root/jailbreak it.

Not the manufacturer, but rather the carrier is the one that imposes the restrictions.

Why do people root their phones?

1) To say they can - Android is a platform that attracts geeks, so naturally people want to do it

2) To load custom ROM's people create, and to test out new releases like Android 2.2

Jailbreak and rooting a phone is not the same in the strict sense

What strict sense is that? Having jailbroken every iPhone I ever owned AND rooting my Android devices, they are exactly the same - just different terms for different devices. Okay so you won't replace iPhone OS but you aren't really replacing WM or droid when you flash custom roms either, just a variation on the theme.

Both allow you to modify your phone in ways not intended by the manufacturer or carrier.

Droid X actually self-destructs if you try to mod it

Well, I might have recommended a Droid X for big-phone-lovin? fandroids out there? but now that I?ve read about Motorola?s insane eFuse security system, I?m going to have to give this one a big fat DON?T BUY on principle. I won?t restate all my reasons for supporting the modding, hacking, jailbreaking, and so on of your legally-owned products here ? if you?re interested in a user?s manifesto, read this ? but suffice it to say that deliberately bricking a phone if the user fiddles with it does not fall under the ?reasonable? category of precautions taken by manufacturers.

Really. If you want to make it difficult to hack, that?s fine. You think your software should be enough, that?s fine. But once I pay money for the item, it?s mine, and disabling my device because you don?t like what I?m doing with it falls under the category of sabotage.

Here?s what eFuse does. This information is a couple days old but it?s worth reading if you?re interested in Android, development, or open standards in general. Besides, I just found out about it, so you have to read my words whether you like it or not. or you could just stop reading. Either way. Anyway:

It requires a hardware fix, apparently, only available through Motorola, of course. This is the equivalent of a MacBook detonating some core component if you try to install an OS to dual boot.

Will many users run into this problem? Probably not, but Android is a platform that not only was founded on the idea of openness, but thrives because of it. The grey market of sideloaded apps and custom ROMs will only get more popular and more easily accessed as people realize that their phones are tiny computers waiting to be customized. That idea is anathema to Motorola and clearly they will continue to stoop to unreasonable means to ?protect? their hardware ? which you bought and paid for.

So here?s my official recommendation: don?t buy a Droid phone and don?t recommend them to your friends. There are too many good options out there that aren?t locked down by nefarious means. Look up a Galaxy phone or wait for the next awesome thing to come along. Vote with your wallet and tell Motorola ?open or GTFO.?

Source: MobileCrunch

COOL! Apple needs to do the same.

AND (this is a REALLY BIG AND), unless you pay full price for a phone, not the subsidized price that you pay on contract, it's not your phone until you have fulfilled your contractual obligation. So can it with your self righteous crap.

Jailbreak and rooting a phone is not the same in the strict sense

Pretty much the same thing.

They give you root level access on the phone. I guess they are spelled different. Root is spelled "R-O-O-T" and jailbreak is spelled "J-A-I-L-B-R-E-A-K".

But, the end result is the same: root access.

What strict sense is that? Having jailbroken every iPhone I ever owned AND rooting my Android devices, they are exactly the same - just different terms for different devices. Okay so you won't replace iPhone OS but you aren't really replacing WM or droid when you flash custom roms either, just a variation on the theme.

Both allow you to modify your phone in ways not intended by the manufacturer or carrier.

Basically (im not going to go into details; those you can look up yourself)

Jailbreak allows you to install applications which are not signed by Apple and/or are not in the App Store

Root access allows you to access system files/functions/etc which are not typically accessed (but can be accessed from any normal nonrooted Android app with certain exceptions)

Pretty much the same thing.

They give you root level access on the phone. I guess they are spelled different. Root is spelled "R-O-O-T" and jailbreak is spelled "J-A-I-L-B-R-E-A-K".

But, the end result is the same: root access.

See above.

Then why do you have to root in the first place?

It's just like jailbreak. The manufacturer puts limitations on the phone, but if you don't like the limitation, you can always void your warranty and root/jailbreak it.

The difference is, if it's a voided warranty, it's like saying "do what you want, but we are not responsible". Whereas this is, "if you do this, i will effing stab you through the heart"

COOL! Apple needs to do the same.

AND (this is a REALLY BIG AND), unless you pay full price for a phone, not the subsidized price that you pay on contract, it's not your phone until you have fulfilled your contractual obligation. So can it with your self righteous crap.

Ok, so if I buy it without a contract, are they gonna give it to me without the eFuse? No. Now quit YOUR self righteous crap you troll. You have little understanding of what the contracts are and are for, so next time read yours.

Ok, so if I buy it without a contract, are they gonna give it to me without the eFuse? No. Now quit YOUR self righteous crap you troll. You have little understanding of what the contracts are and are for, so next time read yours.

HAHAHAHAHAHA ...Oh god...I seriously just laughed out loud on that one. That was great! (Y)

I am calm, just expressing my opinion. And no, most Android makers DO NOT tell you what you can and cannot do. Why they don't frown on people rooting their phone like Apple does. Why they allow a ton of devs to mod the phone's software and make changes to it. We can also overclock our phones. Motorola is the exception tho.

http://androidandme.com/2009/09/hacks/cyanogenmod-in-trouble/

Everyone?s favorite Android hacker appears to have angered someone at Google. We just received word that Cyanogen has received a cease and desist letter from Google.

The Android hackers have also ticked off htc. So, no, they do frown upon it just as Apple frowns upon it.

Basically (im not going to go into details; those you can look up yourself)

Jailbreak allows you to install applications which are not signed by Apple and/or are not in the App Store

Root access allows you to access system files/functions/etc which are not typically accessed (but can be accessed from any normal nonrooted Android app with certain exceptions)

See above.

Jailbreaking is not limited to just installing non-App Store apps and provides root access to the system as well.

Wondering if this initiative from Motorola will be follow be other companies as well, like Apple. Which by the way will not surprise me at all if Apple is next doing this type of thing because of their very toug regulations and policies.

Hello? Where are the iPhone 4 critics to tell me once again I should buy a Droid X instead?

Seems like it will only be a problem if you root the phone, so just don't root it.. it's still a phone you can hold any way you like ;)

Then why are getting a Droid X/Android phone in the first place?

1. I want a good phone with app support

2. I must be on the Verizon network (either I let my parents pay the phone bill and stay on Verizon, or I pay my own and pick my carrier, of which, Verizon has the best network)

3. I want a phone with internet access as I have no access on my laptop where I am staying at right now

So in short, because the Droid X/an Android phone is the best phone that meets my needs.

Is this even legal for them to do? Sure, you are breaking their TOU by trying to root or whatever, but to actually physically brick your phone for doing it seems a little too far. Fine, the warranty is void, but I am not sure making your phone useless is legal, since you paid for the hardware. This isn't software where you only buy a license to use it.

Engadget asked Motorola for an explanation and received the following reply:

"Motorola's primary focus is the security of our end users and protection of their data, while also meeting carrier, partner and legal requirements. The Droid X and a majority of Android consumer devices on the market today have a secured bootloader. In reference specifically to eFuse, the technology is not loaded with the purpose of preventing a consumer device from functioning, but rather ensuring for the user that the device only runs on updated and tested versions of software. If a device attempts to boot with unapproved software, it will go into recovery mode, and can re-boot once approved software is re-installed. Checking for a valid software configuration is a common practice within the industry to protect the user against potential malicious software threats. Motorola has been a long time advocate of open platforms and provides a number of resources to developers to foster the ecosystem including tools and access to devices via MOTODEV at http://developer.motorola.com."

Source

So... the phone won't be bricked, but still unusable if you try to run an alternative firmware on it.

I'm pretty sure in the united states a EULA can say, "if you break the EULA we get to kick you in the nuts"

I think the FCC should get involved. Mobile phones have become the sole telephones for some. In an emergency the phone should just work. Why should I want a phone that because of a parity error or it "thinks" it is trying to be hacked become a brick.

We are not talking an xbox 360 where someones life may be dependant on it. In fact I would gladly see a class action suit if it is true as they are putting a dliberate "flaw" in the device, that may or not cost a human life.

Electronics are not infallible but you should never do this with a device that people depend on. Or just imagine if someone finds a way to do an over-the-air kill switch for anyone near bricking the phone by sending malicious code.

Simply put e-Fuses should never be in consumer devices that are people are depended upon day by day. If this is true bad move Motorola.

Of course I hope someone does find a way to root it and disable said E-Fuse permantly and actually make the device more reliable.

I think the FCC should get involved. Mobile phones have become the sole telephones for some. In an emergency the phone should just work. Why should I want a phone that because of a parity error or it "thinks" it is trying to be hacked become a brick.

We are not talking an xbox 360 where someones life may be dependant on it. In fact I would gladly see a class action suit if it is true as they are putting a dliberate "flaw" in the device, that may or not cost a human life.

Electronics are not infallible but you should never do this with a device that people depend on. Or just imagine if someone finds a way to do an over-the-air kill switch for anyone near bricking the phone by sending malicious code.

Simply put e-Fuses should never be in consumer devices that are people are depended upon day by day. If this is true bad move Motorola.

Of course I hope someone does find a way to root it and disable said E-Fuse permantly and actually make the device more reliable.

Before I read your post I was about to make a comment about how those PR ******* have the audacity to outright lie about their motives and tell us it's for their own good. But then I read your post and I now wish to remark that you have a similar audacity to claim that this is somehow going to endanger your life. You've GOT to be kidding, right?

To reiterate, I agree with you in principle, but I think that's going a bit far. Nobody's gonna die. Just sales are gonna drop.

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

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Posts

    • Samsung introduces new AI classroom tools and interactive displays at ISTELive 2026 by Fiza Ali Samsung has announced several new education-focused software features and interactive displays for schools during ISTELive 2026, taking place in Orlando, Florida, from 28 June to 1 July. The focus of these updates is on making shared classroom displays easier to use for teachers while giving IT administrators more control over managing devices. One of the key additions is the Samsung Account Management Solution (AMS). In many schools, multiple teachers share the same interactive display throughout the day, which means signing in and setting everything up can become repetitive. With AMS, teachers can log in by scanning a QR code or tapping an NFC-enabled ID card. Once signed in, their personalised workspace, including wallpapers, bookmarks, app shortcuts, and files, can be instantly accessed through Home Personalisation. Samsung has also included a screen lock feature, allowing teachers to lock the display if they need to step away briefly. Furthermore, the company is also updating its Education Portal with new tools designed for school IT administrators. The portal will allow IT administrators to register teachers, enrol devices, and manage user access from a central dashboard. Administrators can also link NFC cards to teacher accounts, making sign-ins quicker across shared displays. Another addition is a Tags feature that lets schools organise displays by building or classroom. Those tags can also be used to send emergency notifications to selected Samsung Interactive Displays through compatible platforms such as InformaCast and Raptor. Moreover, the tech giant's AI Assistant is gaining several new features aimed at supporting everyday classroom tasks such as lesson planning and classroom engagement. One of the features is Circle to Search, which lets teachers circle text or images on the display to quickly find related information, videos, or web results without interrupting the lesson. The content can then be brought into Samsung Whiteboard. Another feature, Live Transcript, converts spoken lessons into real-time captions, which could be useful for students with hearing impairments or those in multilingual classrooms. The AI Assistant also introduces AI Summary and AI Quiz. The summary tool creates summaries of recorded lessons, while AI Quiz generates questions based on lesson content so teachers can quickly check how well students are following along. Teachers signed in through Samsung AMS can also return to their previous AI-generated lesson materials without logging in again. Alongside the software updates, Samsung has expanded its Android-based Interactive Display range with three new models: the WAF-S, WAFX-PS, and WAHX-M. The WAF-S and WAFX-PS ship with Android 16, bringing updates to security, accessibility, and overall usability while maintaining compatibility with Google's education services including Google Classroom and Google Drive through EDLA certification. Meanwhile, the new WAHX-M is the biggest addition to the lineup, introducing a 98-inch display for larger spaces such as lecture halls and conference rooms. It will also be available in 65-inch, 75-inch and 86-inch sizes. Samsung says the WAHX-M further includes on-device AI features such as voice commands, text-to-speech, and an AI calculator, alongside support for Samsung AMS and AI Assistant. Samsung AI Assistant has been available since April, while Samsung AMS and the updated Education Portal will begin rolling out in July.
    • It's been $24 (single) or $89 (4-pack) for many days on both Amazon and Walmart as far as I know. That isn't a big discount. If these end up like the 1st gen, the 4-pack will routinely get down around $80, give or take a dollar. I think they have even hit $69 at times.
    • Microsoft brings Claude to its own Azure infrastructure, powered by Nvidia GB300 Blackwell by Karthik Mudaliar Anthropic's Claude models are now generally available in Microsoft Foundry on Azure and are running on Nvidia's GB300 Blackwell Ultra systems. Nvidia wrote in its announcement that the models are hosted on Microsoft Azure and accelerated by GB300 Blackwell Ultra GPUs, with Quantum-X800 InfiniBand networking used to support larger agentic systems and specialized sub-agents that can operate across business domains. This is great for customers and enterprises that want to build autonomous and domain-specific AI agents using Claude without moving outside Microsoft’s cloud platform. Microsoft currently offers Claude models in Foundry in two forms: “Hosted on Azure,” which runs end-to-end on Azure infrastructure and is generally available, and “Hosted on Anthropic infrastructure,” which remains in preview. This separation is quite important for organizations that have procurement, compliance, data processing, or internal governance requirements tied to Azure. Anthropic currently has 11 Claude models listed in Microsoft Foundry, including Opus 4.8, Sonnet 4.6, and even the unavailable Mythos and Fable models. Billing is handled through Claude Consumption Units (CCUs). Microsoft says CCU is an invoicing unit for Claude models in Foundry, with token usage converted using Anthropic’s published per-model token rates. The usage is billed through Azure Marketplace just like models from other distributors and appears on the customer's Azure invoice, while eligible spend can count against a Microsoft Azure Consumption Commitment. For starters, GB300 NVL72 is a rack-scale, fully liquid-cooled system that combines 72 Blackwell Ultra GPUs and 36 Grace CPUs. Nvidia has listed 37TB of fast memory, 130TB/s of NVLink bandwidth, and FP4 Tensor Core performance of up to 1,440 petaflops with sparsity. The deal is also part of a three-way partnership between Microsoft, Nvidia, and Anthropic. Under the deal, Anthropic has committed to buying $30 billion in Azure compute capacity and contracting additional capacity up to one gigawatt. Nvidia and Microsoft also said they would invest up to $10 billion and $5 billion in Anthropic, respectively.
    • WhatsApp is getting usernames, and you can reserve your preferred one now by Fiza Ali Sharing your phone number isn't always something you want to do, especially with people you've just met. Whether it's someone from a class, a local community group, or a sports team chat, handing over your number can feel like giving away more personal information than necessary. That's exactly the problem WhatsApp is trying to solve with its upcoming usernames feature. The company has announced that users can now reserve a unique WhatsApp username ahead of the feature's wider rollout later this year. Once usernames become available, they'll let people connect without revealing their phone numbers. It's a change that makes a lot of sense for group chats. Right now, everyone in the group can see your phone number. With usernames enabled, that won't necessarily be the case when someone contacts you for the first time. WhatsApp says it's opening username reservations early because more than three billion people use the app, meaning plenty of people are likely to want the same usernames. Reserving one now gives users a better chance of securing the name they actually want before the feature launches more broadly. If your preferred username is already taken, WhatsApp will also offer a built-in username generator to suggest available alternatives. The feature isn't only aimed at individual users. Creators, businesses, and organisations will be able to claim the same username they already use on Instagram or Facebook, making it easier to keep a consistent identity across Meta's apps. Furthermore, privacy is a big part of how WhatsApp is introducing usernames. There won't be a public directory where people can browse or search for usernames. Instead, people will need to know your exact username before they can start a conversation with you. Additionally, users can also choose to enable a username key, which adds another layer of control by requiring people to enter that key before sending a message. Once the feature rolls out, people who choose to use a username will no longer have their phone number shown when messaging a person or business for the first time. If you want to reserve a username, make sure you're running the latest version of WhatsApp, then head to Settings > Account > Username. The tech giant says usernames will roll out gradually over the coming months, and users will receive an in-app notification when the feature becomes available in their country.
    • When I think about a network, there are really two aspects, the hardware and the wiring. So here is what I would do for both. Wiring: Use Cat6A for the patch panel, outlets, and all structured cables (cables installed in walls). Run plenty of Wireless Access Point (WAP) cables, as a general rule, assume a signal can only pass through 2-3 walls and can't pass through a floor (that is conservative, but trust me on this if you want strong WiFi)  Cat6 patch cables are fine for now if you don't plan to run 10gig, those are easy to replace later if needed. Run OS2 single-mode fiber to anywhere you think you may have a server or sub-switch. (yes, single-mode for everything on a small network, don't mess with multimode unless you are at a scale where that minor cost and power savings will matter). If you really want to future proof, also run fiber to any high density WAP locations, it is likely that WiFi 8 and beyond WAPs will push the limits of 10g. Run 6-12 pairs of single-mode fiber between your MDF and the building's MDF, even if you only need 1 or 2 pairs now, those extra pairs will pay off down the road. Hardware: (its easy to say "get all the features incase you need them", so instead of futureproofing, I am going to take approach of suggesting areas worth investing in, and areas you can save money). Don't overspend thinking you need every feature on every port. You don't need 10g on every port, you don't need PoE on every port. Don't overspend on redundancy either, unless you are ready to buy two of everything, don't waste money buying two of some things and not others. Dual power supplies are worthwhile, but probably not HA or multi-path redundancy.  Get 1 "distribution layer" switch that your router/firewall will connect to as well as all your access layer switches below. This should be a fully managed 10g+ switch with a combination of copper and SPF ports, a few 25g uplink ports are nice for this switch. Given that you said it is a small network, I suggest also using that distribution layer switch for servers and WAPs, meaning it will need PoE. Speaking of wireless, get good professional tri-band WAPs, and either turn on the band stirring options, or limit 2.4 to an IoT only SSID. This will provide a solid WiFi capable nearly everything but the highest of bandwidth clients...you could even consider skipping wiring workstations depending on usage. Access layer switch for workstations and printers can be cheaper switches, 2.5g is a good sweet spot between price and future proofing, but even 1g is fine for most individual clients (the kind that could probably be fine on WiFi). You can consider saving a little on access layer switches by only getting 1 PoE switch for whatever needs it (remember your WAPs are connecting to the distribution switch, not here), and non-PoE for your workstations, because desk phones are falling out of favor. You can also save money here by not buying managed switches if you don't need them--but really do some soul searching there, if you go this route, then anything that isn't on your workstation VLAN would either need to be connected to the distribution switch, or its own access layer switch. Also, don't feel like you need a fancy fabric stacking switches for your access layer, that is the point of the higher-end distribution layer, to remove the need for things like that at this level. Home Hardware: I'm realizing the above assumed an office setting, if this if for your house and home lab then the above still applies, but you'll probably want everything managed and PoE, just because, but you probably also don't need multiple access layer switches. If your total port count is below 24, just skip separating distribution layer and access layer and just get one nice switch with the features you want. If you are at the point of considering a 48-port switch, I would instead get a nice high-end distribution switch for things that need it, and cheaper access layer switches with specs based on the needs of connected devices. For home use, don't worry about home running every device to the main switch, there is nothing wrong with running sub-switches for your media areas and office, those essentially become your access layer, just look for sub-switches with a 10g uplink so sharing bandwidth isn't an issue. Just make sure you always connect them to your distribution/main switch, don't daisy chain, the path should never have more steps than Client>Access>Distribution>Firewall>Internet or Client>Access>Distribution>Server if it is local.
  • Recent Achievements

    • Reacting Well
      NovaEdgeX earned a badge
      Reacting Well
    • Week One Done
      NovaEdgeX earned a badge
      Week One Done
    • One Year In
      BA the Curmudgeon earned a badge
      One Year In
    • Conversation Starter
      rosiecharles earned a badge
      Conversation Starter
    • First Post
      KMilenkoski1202 earned a badge
      First Post
  • Popular Contributors

    1. 1
      +primortal
      536
    2. 2
      +Edouard
      269
    3. 3
      PsYcHoKiLLa
      150
    4. 4
      Steven P.
      98
    5. 5
      macoman
      66
  • Tell a friend

    Love Neowin? Tell a friend!