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September 19, 2007 10:00 AM PDT

Tackling the cell phone unlock game

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There are several price plans to choose from, depending on variables like mobile TV, free nights and weekends, video or picture messaging, video calling, mobile broadband, unlimited monthly usage and texting. I went with the standard "Anytime" plan that was 60 cents for the first three minutes of the day and 20 cents after that. You could save more money by buying 70 texts for $10 and just texting.

I bought a 5-pound Vodafone "TopUp" voucher with cash and entered the 12-digit code it came with on my phone to add more money to the SIM card. The vouchers also are available via ATMs for the banks HSBC, Lloyds, TSB, Natwest or Royal Bank of Scotland. You can alternatively register your credit card with Vodafone and add minutes by texting.

Step 3: The road test. And: What about switching back?
The phone worked without a hitch. It was nice to be able to give people in the U.K. a local phone number for their convenience and also store their incoming numbers on my own phone. Also, phone numbers provided when calling information can be texted to your phone. That may not seem like much, but it can be much easier than struggling to scribble down a four-digit exchange and six-digit number dispatched by a fast-talking operator.

Upon returning home, I was a little nervous: Nobody from either AT&T or Vodafone told me how to switch back to my original service. Upon landing in New York, I simply removed the Vodafone SIM card, put my AT&T SIM card back in and powered on the phone. After a few minutes, my phone reconnected with the local network and I was back to my old service.

Things to consider
Your phone must be compatible with one of the networks used in the country you're visiting. My Cingular 8525 (AT&T 8525) is compatible with GSM 850/900/1800/1900; EDGE; UMTS and HSDPA. The major mobile carriers in the U.K. use GSM 900, GSM 1800 and 3G networks, so there was no problem.

Finally, there's no guarantee that your carrier or phone manufacturer will be cooperative in handing over the unlock code for your phone. A little extra patience while on the phone with the customer service representative and giving your carrier plenty of notice before your trip will likely help.

CNET News.com's Marguerite Reardon contributed to this report.

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SIM card, Vodafone Group Plc., phone network, carrier, code

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No problem getting unlock code from T-Mobile
by akuehnemund September 19, 2007 10:15 AM PDT
I never had a problem getting an unlock code from T-Mobile
assuming I had had the phone for at least 90 days. I had read
that somewhere, so when I wanted to unlock an old phone of
mine to bring along on a trip overseas, In called them up and
they gave it to me over the phone - right there and then. The
guy even walkled me through it. Very easy.

I also once owned an AT&T Palm phone (I can't remember the
model). While it was sold unlocked in Canada, it was locked to
AT&T here in the U.S. I called them up and asked them to give
the unlock code. Their response: "We do not give out unlock
codes.". Great! Needless to say, I got rid of the phone (this was a
work phone) and I have not been with AT&T since.

One suggestion: Bring two phones when you travel. Keep your
U.S. SIM chip in your primary phone, so that people can reach
you under your U.S. number. Bring a second phone (maybe an
older once that's sitting in a box somewhere) and put the
foreign SIM chip in that phone.
Reply to this comment
T-Mobile takes a week
by cary1 September 19, 2007 10:59 AM PDT
I got two of my phone unlocked in last three years. I didn't have to plead them to send me the unlock code. All they need is that the account has been active for three months.

It took them almost a week to send the code though. I have seen some online code calculators which can generate the same code in 30 seconds, but I am not sure how much I can trust them.
Reply to this comment
T-Mobile unlocked my Blackberry within a day
by mas90guru September 19, 2007 11:47 AM PDT
I have followed your advice in the past and T-Mobile provided me with an unlock code within a day. There appear to be a few rules - mainly limiting the # of unlocks you can request and that you have to be a subscriber in good standing for a certain period of time.

My customer service rep was more than happy to submit the case as soon as I told him about needing to go overseas and use a prepaid sim card.
Reply to this comment
T-Mobile Helped me in minutes
by tomcat1483 September 19, 2007 4:52 PM PDT
When I called to get the unlock code the helped me in minutes. I think they did offer me an oversees package. But when I declined they went right ahead and got me the unlock code. I first got the code almost a year ago for one of my phones and then this February I called again to unlock my Blackberry. They said they would text me the code and in under an hour they had sent me the code I had entered it and my blackberry was now truly free to roam the world.
T-Mobile is better, but not perfect
by paulej September 19, 2007 6:27 PM PDT
I once walked into a T-Mobile store and saw a phone I wanted. I didn't want service-- just the phone. I offered to pay full price for the phone if they would give it to me unlocked. They refused.

What is the point of offering the phone for sale with a full MSRP price tag if they are unwilling to sell it to non-subscribers?

In nearly every other country in the world, it is possible to walk into any number of mobile phone stores and buy a really cool phone. But, not the US. Why is that?

Are Americans unwilling to buy phones? Or, is it that the major carriers control the market too tightly?
View all 2 replies
Cingular gave it too..
by abhishek_p September 19, 2007 2:10 PM PDT
I got unlock code from Cingular rather easily too.. At first they were not ready to give a code as my service with them was less than 3 months old but after some talking they agreed... It took them a day to send me an email...
Reply to this comment
Doesn't the consumer own unlock code?
by UmeshS September 19, 2007 3:40 PM PDT
Not giving unlock code to consumer seems similar to music industry not allowing the CD you bought to be played in more than one CD-player.
Reply to this comment
Who owns the unlock code
by bpaskin September 19, 2007 3:58 PM PDT
I live and work in both America and Italy. I decided to have two phones instead of just replacing my SIM. In Italy, all phones are unlocked because they are not subsidized from the phone carriers. However, in America the phones are usually subsidized from the phone carriers, with one or two year contracts.

The other problem I have is that my phone from Italy, from 3 Italia, is a 3G phone that uses a USIM. My AT&T phone uses regular SIM card. Even so, I called Cingular, at the time, and asked for my unlock code when my contract expired and they willingly offered the code within 5 minutes.

Since the companies in America subsidize the phones, I would expect some resistance until the contract expires.
Phones are subsidized
by mathmeister September 19, 2007 3:58 PM PDT
The difference is that you are not paying full price for the phone, as you are with a CD. On the other hand, you do have to sign a contract with them and agree to pay subscription fees for 2 years, so, yeah, it doesn't quite make sense for them to be so stingy with the unlock code. You will have to pay them, anyway.
View reply
AT&T Blue coughed up UnLock code
by RogerD 760 September 19, 2007 4:22 PM PDT
I still have an AT&T Blue account (old AT&T) with a Treo 650 (all the store reps say to keep it). Everytime I call Customer Support I get the pitch about having to upgrade to at&t Orange. Of course, they tell me I must buy a new phone as the AT&T branded Treo will not work on the at&t network. I tell them I'm not giving up an expensive phone just for a marketing decision. After a seriously bad dealing with a call rep that almost caused me to leave Cingular, a compassionate rep offered to submit a request for the appropriate unlock code. It showed up about a week later and the phone worked fine in Austrailia using a local SIM. I also made a point of swapping SIMs every other day to pickup VM and text messages.

Having been an adopted customer (started Cellular One, then AT&T, then Cingular, and now at&t) I've always kidded the Cingular call takers about holding out until they become AT&T, who knew...
Reply to this comment
AT&T / Cingular gave me mine
by cmcmanis September 19, 2007 11:30 PM PDT
I have a RAZR V3 and Cingular (AT&T) give me the unlock code after filing a "case". I put it on a label and stuck it into the battery compartment (where the SIM card is). According to the manager at the Cingular store in San Jose if you've had your phone for more than 2 years (or past the end of your commitment period) they are fine to give you your unlock code. He also mentioned something about a California E-Waste law that was going to require all carriers to provide unlock codes but I couldn't find that from some simple searching. It seemed reasonable since it makes a cell phone much more "recyclable" if you can use it on a different carrier.
Reply to this comment
Try united-moblie
by w_jackson September 20, 2007 11:28 AM PDT
The only issue with this is that if you're traveling around Europe (or Asia for that matter) you have to get a separate pre-paid SIM for every country.

About three years ago I stumbled across a pan-europe (and now most of the world) prepaid card that I could use when I travel. Used to go by the name of Riiing but now goes by the name of united mobile.

www.united-mobile.com

They'll even sign you up and send you the SIM before you take off to Europe so that you know your phone number and can give it to people. Same gig, prepaid that can be refilled over the internet. very useful
Reply to this comment
Unlock services
by guonbeeman September 20, 2007 3:51 PM PDT
There are also commercial unlock services who will provide you with your unlock code for a fee, if your carrier won't. I've used several of these companies with great success.
Reply to this comment
T-Mobile
by hawkeyeaz1 September 20, 2007 8:25 PM PDT
I likewise had no issue getting an unlock code from T-Mobile after having it for 3 months (a 2 year contract). It took a week for me to get the email, also, but it worked. I have another phone I will be unlocking soon, same model. I haven't used the unlocked phone yet (I went to Canada, but ended up not needing it).

I have to say though, T-Mobile treats their customers much better than Verizon (who, obviously can't give you unlock codes as your phone is tethered to their network).
Reply to this comment
Additional comment
by hawkeyeaz1 September 20, 2007 8:29 PM PDT
I will also add that when I signed up with T-Mobile, I asked about unlocking when I was signing the contract, and the sales rep told me they would gladly do it at the 3 month point, either call customer service or visit the store.
How can a phone company get away with locking phones that you paid for.
by billshook September 21, 2007 8:53 AM PDT
It should be illegal for a phone company to lock phones that you paid for.

I bought a couple phones over the past several years and have to travel internationally. I usually stay about three months or six months in another country. I was told that after a period of several months I could get them "unlocked". The phones I bought I couldn't use on my carriers in the other countries. When I tried to call from the other country back to the US to get my codes, they wouldn't give it to me because of not being able to verify the number I was calling from. A real headache and total waste of money buying phones that can't be used internationally.

You paid for your phone. It should be yours to use any way you want to use it, and with any carrier that you choose.

For example, say you bought a television, then the company you bought the television from tells you that you can only use it to watch the channels they provide. It wouldn't be your television. You'd basically be leasing it.

Same idea with the phone. You bought it, but actually if the company locked it, then you don't own the phone, you're leasing it.

There should be a regulations against selling phones that are "locked". I buy phones in Asia often, and they are never locked. I now prefer to buy the latest model phones in Asia, and use them in the US when I come back. when I buy them, they are my phones, not controlled by a phone company.

I'm not really sure how the phone companies can get away with this practice for so long.
Reply to this comment
You agreed to it.
by Tomcat Adam September 21, 2007 12:17 PM PDT
You agree to it in your contract. Same thing as buying Photoshop CS3 or a videogame; you don't own it, you're only leasing it permanently from the company, who has the ownership rights.
Not at all fair.
But it's capitalist, and it is business. And it always will be.

If you make a legal, written contract to let someone slap you in the face then they are certainly entitled to slap you in the face.
Not quite mate...
by SpitfireAu September 22, 2007 12:45 AM PDT
The reason they are able to do that is so they can entice people to their own service, essentially. In reality, the major companies can provide phones on plans cheaper is because they initially (or sometimes completely) subsidise the cost of the phone, to be recouped in the form of your monthly carrier charges. Therefore, in order to provide a cheaper phone for you and remain financially viable they need to make sure they will get the money in the end.

Think of it this way, at least you can just request it, even if it means that you have to verbally wrestle with customer service a bit. For most of the carriers here in Australia it costs about $80AUD, sometimes dependent on how long you've been on the plan, what sort of plan etc.

Next time, read the fine print... Or buy the phone outright, and be prepared to pay a premium for it.

Mike
I agree if you pay the full retail price
by bluemist9999 September 22, 2007 5:49 AM PDT
If someone paid the full $300-$600 for a cell phone (like they usually do in Europe), I agree completely.

But, if someone buys a phone at a cheaper price, by subscribing to a long-term contract with a particular carrier, the phone should be locked if the carrier wants to.

In essence, I feel the customer is "renting" the phone until the phone's full retail price is paid for. At that point, the phone should be totally unlocked.
UNLOCK
by sonopasquale September 22, 2007 6:56 AM PDT
I asked ATT to unlock my phone and they sent me the code. When I asked for help, they unlocked it for me. There wasn't any pressure of any sort. I don't think this possible with a Verizon or Sprint phone, just T-Mobile and ATT.
I will try it on my next trip.
Reply to this comment
finally got a code!
by megloman October 2, 2007 7:53 PM PDT
They wouldn't give me a code so I got my blackberry unlock code from here:
http://www.newmobilefreedom.com/blackberry-imei-unlock-p-99.html
worked prefect! and I got it the same day.
Hope this helps
Reply to this comment
Lucky You! IMEI also blocked by ATT
by sophisticated user-suffer November 20, 2007 11:57 AM PST
AT&T has not only invalidated the SIM unlock code, but has also invalidated (Locked up?) my IMEI number (I complained to them that my treo 680 has never worked and therefore I have millions on ROLLED-OVER minutes!!!
Is there anyone out there with a solution, other than going to the FCC? I will be going away to asia and australia and can use this phone,; it is a PDA and therefore, it has all my important phone contact numbers and such.
Reply to this comment
Got my code with a 10 minute phone call...
by sjschaef December 3, 2007 9:03 AM PST
I called ATT and told them that I would be traveling overseas a lot and to areas that they did not cover service. I told her that the sales rep in the store told me it wouldn't be a problem to get it unlocked when I purchased the phone (which isn't a totally accurate statement). I would need to use a differnt SIM card so I could continue to use the PDA function. It took the lady a while to fill out the request form (about 8 minutes) because she hadn't done it before.. It took only a few days to receive the email that included the code. It worked... I just had to put in a different company's SIM card... It was just that easy.
Reply to this comment
Changing to T-Mobile Prepaid Service
by imdashiznit1234 April 1, 2008 3:22 PM PDT
I have an unlocked phone and would like to subscribe for the T-Mobile Prepaid Service. From what I hear, I need a sim card. But when the card runs out, can I refill it and how?
Reply to this comment
by jamesgeoffory August 17, 2008 3:11 AM PDT
Hi,


If you want to avoid the time and hassle of trying to persuade your cell company to give you an unlock code,

Check out www.FreeYourCellphone.com


Fast, reliable and cheap.

They Unlocked 3 phones for me, a T-Mobile Blackberry 8320, a Nokia n95 8GB(Rogers) and a Nokia 6300 from Fido which no one else was able to unlock.

I was pleased with there service

Hope this helps.


Rick
Reply to this comment
by mobilefiles November 19, 2008 3:58 PM PST
We can unlock ANY motorola phone for ANY wireless provider for $11

Visit our eBay store to see for yourself. We even offer SAME DAY UNLOCKING!

http://stores.ebay.com/mobilefiles

Mention you heard this from cnet.com and we will take off an additional $2.00 Get your unlock code tonight!
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