Legal protection for people who unlock their mobile phones to use them on other networks expired last weekend. According to the claims
of major U.S. wireless carriers, unlocking a phone bought after January
26 without your carrier's permission violates the Digital Millennium
Copyright Act (“DMCA”) whether the phone is under contract or not. In a
way, this is not as bad as it sounds. In other ways, it's even worse.
What changed? The DMCA prohibits
"circumventing" digital locks that "control access" to copyrighted works
like movies, music, books, games, and software. It's a fantastically
overbroad law that bans a lot of legal, useful, and important
activities. In what's supposed to be a safety valve, the U.S. Copyright
Office and the Library of Congress have the power to create exemptions for important activities that would otherwise be banned by the DMCA. In 2012, EFF asked for - and won
- exemptions for jailbreaking or rooting mobile phones to run
unapproved software, and for using clips from DVDs and Internet video in
noncommercial vids. Consumers Union and several smaller wireless
carriers asked for an exemption for unlocking phones. The Copyright
Office granted their exemption too - but sharply limited the window to
just a few months.
First, the good news. The legal shield for
jailbreaking and rooting your phone remains up - it'll protect us at
least through 2015. The shield for unlocking your phone is down, but
carriers probably aren't going to start suing customers en masse,
RIAA-style. And the Copyright Office's decision, contrary to what some
sensational headlines have said, doesn't necessarily make unlocking
illegal.
Unlocking is in a legal grey area under the
DMCA. The law was supposed to protect creative works, but it's often
been misused by electronics makers to block competition and kill markets
for used goods. The courts have pushed back,
ruling that the DMCA doesn't protect digital locks that keep digital
devices from talking to each other when creative work isn't involved.
And no creative work is involved here: Wireless carriers aren't worried
about "piracy" of the software on their phones, they're worried about
people reselling subsidized phones at a profit. So if the matter ever
reached a court, it might well decide that the DMCA does not forbid
unlocking a phone.
Now, the bad news. While we don’t expect mass
lawsuits anytime soon, the threat still looms. More likely, wireless
carriers, or even federal prosecutors, will be emboldened to sue not
individuals, but rather businesses that unlock and resell phones. If a
court rules in favor of the carriers, penalties can be stiff - up to
$2,500 per unlocked phone in a civil suit, and $500,000 or five years in
prison in a criminal case where the unlocking is done for "commercial
advantage." And this could happen even for phones that are no longer
under contract. So we're really not free to do as we want with devices
that we own.
Phones are, of course, the tip of the iceberg of problems the DMCA has created.
It kills aftermarkets, interferes with legitimate research, and
squelches creativity in new media. The exemptions created by the
Copyright Office can be helpful but, as this episode shows, they are too
narrow and too brief.
They also turn a small, specialized federal
office into a sort of Technology Regulation Bureau. It's absurd that
this small group of copyright lawyers and librarians is tasked with
making decisions about the future of electronics markets.
So what can we do? Creating and defending the
next round of exemptions will start in late 2014. If lawsuits happen,
the courts should recognize that the DMCA is being misused, and refuse
to apply it to anti-competitive software locks. Ultimately, what we
really need is to either fix the exemption process or reboot the
anti-circumvention provisions of the DMCA, or both.
January 28, 2013 | By Mitch Stoltz
https://www.eff.org/is-it-illegal-to-unlock-a-phone
good post
ReplyDeleteThe updated information is.....It is now legal to get our phones unlocked from third party unlocking services in U.S.Recently, I unlocked my mobile .I had to travel outside my country and I had to unlock it very quickly.My network provider prolonged the unlock process...and luckily the amendment of unlocking phone made legal saved my time.I used the service from Unlocking4free.com and removed the network lock very easily.They unlocked my phone within few hours....
ReplyDelete