Skip to main content

iPhone Unlocking Goes Open Source

It was just a couple days ago that Apple announced it had sold more than 1 million iPhones, and iPhoneSimFree went on sale as the only software-only unlocking solution for unhitching the iPhone from AT&T’s mobile network so the device could (with some limitations) be used on any GSM mobile network. Now, there may not be any reason to pay money to unlock the iPhone: a free, open source iPhone unlocking solution dubbed iUnlock has appeared on the Internet from the so-called iPhone Dev team, and the developers are busily wrapping a graphic interface around it for the benefit of users unfamiliar with the cryptic ways of command lines.

Breaking an iPhone loose from the AT&T mobile network doesn’t magically make the iPhone acquire HSDPA or other high-speed wireless data technologies, although the majority of the iPhone’s basic features will function on other operator’s GSM-based mobile networks. One notable exception is the iPhone’s popular Visual Voicemail, which requires server-side support currently only offered by AT&T.

In the United States, T-Mobile operates the only other widespread GSM network; however, unlocked iPhones may have a significant appeal to mobile users outside the United States, where the iPhone is not currently available for sale but, moreoever, GSM networks are far more common.

iUnlock was apparently inspired by examining how the iPhoneSIMFree solution worked: iPhoneSIMFree found a software-based means to reprogram the iPhone’s baseband chip, which had previously been thought unassailable without hardware modifications. Knowing that a baseband-zapping solution was possible, the iUnlock developers apparently developed their own means of doing so, without relying on the iPhoneSIMFree solution. As is typical for many, how shall we say, informal development efforts, the iPhone Dev folks are now tussling over credit for who did what when, and who was authorized to release code, and even floating accusations of code theft.

Needless to say, anyone untethering an iPhone from the AT&T network risks running afoul of Apple: unlocking an iPhone may make it ineligible for future software updates, and it’s possible Apple could update the iPhone software so unlocking solutions no longer function or (worse) unlocked iPhones cease to function. Caveat emptor.

Geoff Duncan
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Geoff Duncan writes, programs, edits, plays music, and delights in making software misbehave. He's probably the only member…
Your next iPhone may have no bezels. Here’s why that could be a problem
iPhone 14 Pro Max laying on top of iPad showing always-on display with wallpaper setting off.

Don’t believe everything you see, but there’s a certain joy in imagining products with a futuristic touch to them. One such fantastical element of the smartphone industry is a truly bezel-free all-screen phone. And as implausible as that sounds, it looks like Apple might be the one to achieve it — and at the biggest scale imaginable.

According to South Korean outlet The Elec, Apple has reportedly asked, “Samsung Display and LG Display to develop an OLED that removes all front bezels from the iPhone.” Apple has been painfully slow at eliminating the bezel on iPhones and continues to sell the iPhone SE (2022), which should ideally exist in an era that is half a decade too persistent.

Read more
Another report suggests the iPhone 15 Pro will be pricier
The Apple logo on the iPhone 14 Pro Max.

Apple is expected to manufacture a slightly smaller number of iPhone 15 handsets compared to the iPhone 14 last year, but the company is eyeing an increase in revenue when the device launches in the fall.

How? Because it’s considering increasing the cost of the iPhone 15 Pro models.

Read more
I lost my iPhone on a dream vacation — and it wasn’t a nightmare
Photo of Spain.

Our trip to Spain and Morocco, which my wife, Julie, had meticulously planned for 15 months, started off rather inauspiciously on June 25. After arriving in Chicago from Portland, Oregon, we learned that our connecting flight to Newark, New Jersey, had been canceled due to weather concerns. As we waited in line for two-and-a-half hours to talk to a United Airlines agent, we were told via text by a customer service rep that we might be stuck in the Windy City for two days.

A 30-year Spanish teacher, Julie was on the verge of fulfilling a lifelong dream of visiting Spain. Now, several activities were in danger of being erased from her bucket list as her worst fears about the trip were being realized. When we finally made it to the service desk, our hope was all but snuffed out. We explained the situation to the agent, who spent several minutes looking at his computer wordlessly. He eventually looked up and said: "I can you get out on a flight tonight."

Read more