TELECOM Digest OnLine - Sorted: Hackers Working to Unlock iPhone


Hackers Working to Unlock iPhone


Sumner Lemon, IDG News (idgnews@telecom-digest.org)
Tue, 03 Jul 2007 21:56:41 -0500

by Sumner Lemon, IDG News Service

Efforts to unlock Apple Inc.'s iPhone continued on Monday, with hackers
claiming "very significant progress."

The locked iPhone only works with AT&T Inc.'s EDGE network, and cannot
be used with cellular service from other providers. Locked phones are
generally used to help operators recoup the cost of subsidizing handsets
for their customers, but AT&T is not subsidizing the iPhone, which is
priced at either US$499 or $599, depending on the model. Instead, the
phone is locked because AT&T has a five-year agreement with Apple to be
the sole iPhone provider in the U.S.

Unlocking the iPhone would be a boon for users locked into a contract
with another U.S. carrier, or for users outside the U.S. who want an
iPhone. While initial signs indicate an unlocked iPhone is possible,
hackers must first overcome several challenges. One of those involves
circumventing the authentication process in iTunes that both lets users
register for an AT&T service plan and turn on the phone's features,
including its camera and music player.

By Monday evening, U.S. time, hackers had made headway towards
circumventing the activation process. But the phone remained locked at
the time of writing.

"We have been fairly successful in spoofing iTunes activation processes.
This should allow us to activate the phone," poster gj wrote on the
iPhone Dev Wiki, one of several Web sites tracking efforts to unlock the
phone. "It may in fact also prevent the SIM locking from occurring in
the first place ... though we haven't verified this yet."

These advances allowed hackers to set and read data on the iPhone,
including the ability to query whether a phone has been activated. "The
rest of our work is legwork really, in understanding how certain
functions operate with the rest of the phone," the site said, adding
hackers are close to the ability to browse system files on the iPhone, a
key step towards unlocking the handset.

Once the activation problem has been overcome, hackers will be faced
with other questions. For instance, does iTunes have the ability to
recognize a phone that was not activated for use with the AT&T
network? If so, how will iTunes react?

After these questions are resolved, hackers can focus on unlocking the
handset itself. That task is made easier by the iPhone's use of a
removable SIM (Subscriber Identity Module), a smart card that contains
a user's phone number as well as storage space for contacts and
messages, instead of one that was hardwired into the phone. The use of
a removable SIM card means the iPhone is locked using its firmware,
which can likely be cracked.

While hackers race ahead to unlock the iPhone as quickly as possible,
iPhone Dev Wiki poster gj criticized those hackers competing against
each other to unlock the phone, saying the lack of cooperation had
slowed progress.

"I can't emphasize enough how much this s*** stinks. Trust me, your ego
is not as important as you think it is. If everyone worked together we
would have been done by now, but instead we have a******* all over the
world trying to 'beat us to the punch,'" the poster wrote.

Copyright 2007 PC World Communications, Inc.

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