September 11, 2007 12:26 PM PDT

Temporarily unlock your iPhone for $99

by Tom Krazit
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Free yourself from AT&T! The iPhone revolution is at hand! You'll no longer suffer the tyranny of forced cell phone use for at least another, uh, couple of weeks!

Through the magic of technology, it's now possible to unlock an iPhone from AT&T's network through a software download developed by iPhoneSimFree.com. Engadget and Gizmodo tested out the process, and it does appear that the software will let you use the iPhone on any GSM network either inside the U.S. or overseas.

Unlocking your iPhone is now easier, but the experience could be fleeting.

(Credit: CNET Networks)

It's not the first piece of iPhone unlocking technology. After the iPhone Dev Team figured out how to install applications on the iPhone, a few other hacks have arrived including TurboSim, Uniquephones, and that 17-year-old kid from New Jersey who came up with an unlock that involves much soldering and most definitely voids the warranty.

But do you really want to pay money to unlock the iPhone? Apple intends to release software updates to the iPhone every so often to deliver new features or capabilities, and it doesn't seem that much of a stretch to assume Apple has purchased a copy of the software unlock in order to lock the iPhone again with the next software update. With so much riding on the iPhone, it still seems likely that Apple doesn't want to open up the iPhone to either application development or other networks until it feels more confident about the OS X iPhone software, which is really a 1.0 release of a new operating system.

Rest assured, there will be at least one more iPhone software update this year. And it's not likely that the unlocking software will work after that update arrives, as the folks at iPhoneSimFree.com make clear in several places. Also, the iPhone Dev Team coders, who are asking us not to link to their wiki and flood it with incoming traffic, are mounting a fund-raising campaign spearheaded by Gizmodo to help preserve nonprofit iPhone hacking and reverse-engineer the iPhoneSimFree.com software.

Update at 2:25 p.m.: Later in the day, another member of the iPhone Dev Team posted a message in their forums that the group would not be reverse-engineering the iPhoneSimFree.com software out of respect for that organization. But the group says that no one person speaks for the iPhone Dev Team, so it's hard to get a sense of the group's official position in this case.

So, I can't recommend that you spend a hundred bucks to unlock your iPhone, although I'm sure that advice will have zero effect. Just wait--at the rate AT&T and Apple are going in the early days of their star-crossed relationship, this thing might be officially unlocked quicker than you think.

Tom Krazit writes about the ever-expanding world of Internet search, including Google, Yahoo, online advertising, and portals, as well as the evolution of mobile computing. He has written about traditional PC companies, chip manufacturers, and mobile computers, spending the last three years covering Apple. E-mail Tom.
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Naive Question
by jayhawk73 September 11, 2007 1:24 PM PDT
I'm trying to word this so it doesn't sound sarcastic; if you've unlocked your iphone and you're using it on T-Mobile, how would an AT&T update hit your phone? Do they push the updates through itunes? I'm not an iphone-ee so I'm just curious how they could do it.

I know on a CDMA network the updates go over the air from the provider's OTA update server (roaming lists and such).
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Updates through iTunes
by Tom Krazit September 11, 2007 2:17 PM PDT
No worries.

We're talking about software updates that Apple will issue from time to time to bring new features to the iPhone or to fix bugs. They've already released one, and you get it on the iPhone the same way you'd get new firmware on an iPod, through a cable and iTunes.
It's a Good Question
by Renegade Knight September 12, 2007 7:14 AM PDT
Also, do they even have a legal right to lock the phone once someone has legally unlocked it?
View reply
Wouldn't it be better to demand legislators to make cell phone blocking ill
by PostNoComments September 13, 2007 11:29 AM PDT
Cell phone companies anti-consumer practices have been riding us
long enough. It's time to ask Washington to make cell phone
blocking and ridiculous termination fees illegal.
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