Steve Wozniak says Apple is losing its cool factor

File this under “Steve Wozniak says the dardnest things.” The co-founder of Apple is at it again and is criticizing Apple over its cool factor. Wozniak says that while the company is good at “setting a standard with a new device,” Apple is ultimately starting to lose its cool vibe that they’ve been going after for so many years.

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In an interview with Bloomberg, Wozniak says that without features to outclass competing devices, Apple is having to rely more on its appeal as a premium brand. He says that the company should consider opening up its ecosystem, by allowing Windows Phone and Android devices to use Apple’s iTunes music app.

Plus, the company has tuned it down a bit when it comes to taking risks and introducing completely new products that no one has seen before. Lately, the company has been rehashing older products in a way by simply introducing better specs in their devices. Wozniak says that this lack of innovation and its closed-down ecosystem is starting to make Apple uncool.

Furthermore, Wozniak addressed the iWatch rumors and said that he’s looking forward to such a product if it turns out to be true. He’s been wearing an iPod Nano watch for a couple of years and enjoys the experience. By improving Siri, the iWatch could be a great product, according to Wozniak. And as for the Woz’s take on BlackBerry, he says that company will eventually have to switch to Android if it wants to successful.

[via Bloomberg]


Steve Wozniak says Apple is losing its cool factor is written by Craig Lloyd & originally posted on SlashGear.
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Forrester: Tablet Ownership In Europe To Rise 4x In 5 Years — 55% Of Region’s Online Adults Will Own One By 2017, Up From 14% In 2012

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Analyst Forrester is predicting tablet ownership in Western Europe will quadruple by 2017 – with the percentage of online adults owning a slate projected to increase markedly from less than a fifth (14 per cent) last year to more than half (55 per cent) in 2017. In 2011 the tablet-owner figure stood at just 7 per cent, underlining how quickly digitally connected consumers are adopting slates. ”With double-digit growth in tablet uptake across Western Europe in 2012 and further double-digit growth expected, tablets can no longer be considered a fad,” says Forrester, writing in a new tablet-related research report it’s putting out tomorrow.

The analyst said it expects the consumer-owned installed base of tablets to reach more than 147 million in Western Europe in 2017, up from 33 million in 2012. Its tablet growth forecast is based on a survey of 13,000 consumers in France, Germany, Italy, Netherlands, Spain, Sweden, and the UK. The polled nations with the largest proportion of tablet owners, as a percentage of their total online population, were the Netherlands, with 20 per cent tablet penetration in 2012; Spain with 18 per cent; Italy with 16 per cent; and the U.K. with 15 per cent. France was lowest with just nine per cent.

In a preliminary version of Forrester’s tablet report, seen by TechCrunch, a few observations stand out — including a downward shift in the age-range of the largest group of tablet owners, shifting away from 30- to 40-year-olds to 18- to 24-year-olds. The analyst found a quarter of online adults in the 18- to 24-year-old category owned a tablet in 2012. The shift towards more younger tablet owners may accelerate in future — Forrester points to the rise of “competitively priced” Android powered tablets in the sub-€250 category, such as Amazon’s Kindle Fire and Google’s Nexus 7. And since tablet ownership increases with income, according to Forrester’s findings, and the young are keenest on owning a tablet, then cheaper Android tablets which are half the price of Apple’s iPad are likely to be helping to drive adoption lower down the age range, to users who previously may not have had the disposable income to afford an iPad. As well as Android-powered slates stepping into that pricing vs demand gap, Apple also came out with the smaller, cheaper iPad mini last year. Yet more fuel for the tablet fire.

The living room and the bedroom are the only locations where tablet owners chose their slate over their smartphone

While the young are the keenest on tablets, Forrester said they are by no means the only age-group with an interest. Nearly one in six European online consumers aged 65 or older already owns a tablet, according to the report.

Despite the rise of cheaper slates, price remains a considerable barrier to tablet entry for a big chunk of online European adults — Forrester found that around a third of those polled are not planning on buying a tablet due to price (and regardless of income) — suggesting lots of potential tablet owners still have trouble justifying the purchase of an additional gadget, on top of their smartphone or PC.

When it comes to tablet usage, Forrest found that tablets are unsurprisingly most used in the home — specifically the living room, bedroom and kitchen, whereas smartphones have a much wider and more consistent distribution of usage (as illustrated by the graphic below). The living room and the bedroom are the only two locations where polled tablet owners chose their slate over their smartphone. Or, in other words, the most used gadget is the gadget you have in your pocket.

According to Forrester, the main usage activities for tablets are accessing the Internet, emailing, social networking, playing games, and viewing pictures. It also found that tablets are not the highly personal devices that smartphones are: of the tablet-owners who have a spouse/partner, 63 per cent said they share their tablet with them, while one-third share it with their children — making tablets “a far more social device than smartphones”, according to the analyst.

“Tablets are social devices mostly used in the digital home,” said Thomas Husson, analyst and co-author of the new report, in a statement. “Companies that want to exploit tablet opportunities need to understand they require a differentiated approach from smartphones.”

The report also underlines a ‘halo effect’ for smartphone makers who also sell tablets. Forrester identified a general allegiance among smartphone owners to their phone’s brand when choosing a tablet — especially pronounced for iPhone owners but not limited to Apple’s hardware. The report notes:

While the Apple iPad is the dominant tablet in Western Europe, it is most popular with iPhone owners — a staggering 83% of European iPhone owners who have a tablet opted for an iPad. Similarly, the Samsung Galaxy tablet is most popular with Samsung Galaxy and Wave smartphone owners, and the Windows 7 tablet with owners of Windows-based smartphones.

Tablet owners also tend to own a plethora of other connected gadgets — six others on average, according to Forrester — and are “more technology savvy than non-tablet owners”, a finding that is consistent with an early adopter profile. Forrester links smartphone ownership to tablet ownership as a key driver for slate sales up to now — noting that “the proportion of European smartphone owners who own a tablet (28 per cent) is more than double that of those who aren’t smartphone owners (12 per cent)”.

However the analyst says what’s true for the current crop of (still early adopter) tablet owners, won’t be true as tablet ownership expands to take in a greater proportion of the population. ”We are still in the early-adoption phase of tablet ownership, so the next wave of tablet owners will not be as eager; to convince them to adopt a tablet, marketers will need to stress attributes like accessibility, ease of use, and relevance,” says Forrester.

The analyst believes tablets are likely to expand their usefulness beyond the living room/bedroom in the near future, with usage patterns being shaken up by a variety of factors including enterprise/workplace adoption of tablets; the diversification of form factors (such as smaller tablets and phablets, touchscreen laptops and “netvertibles”, hybrid devices and other new forms); as well as the roll out of 4G cellular services and more cellular data bundles.

Likewise, tablet usage will be dictated by form factor — so usage patterns may also shift, as tablets migrant to other locations. “A tablet with an attachable keyboard will encourage greater usage of email and work-related applications; and while not a pocket-size device, a 7-inch tablet will encourage greater portability,” the report notes.

Engadget Primed: making sense of the US’ new phone unlocking policy

Primed goes in-depth on the technobabble you hear on Engadget every day — we dig deep into each topic’s history and how it benefits our lives. You can follow the series here. Looking to suggest a piece of technology for us to break down? Drop us a line at primed *at* engadget *dawt* com.

On October 25, 2012, the US Librarian of Congress ruled that the act of unlocking your phone was no longer allowed under copyright law. The ruling, which has been severely criticized by consumer advocacy groups and tech enthusiasts across the country, declares that it’s a copyright violation if you unlock your phone without the permission of the carrier it’s locked to.

Why would such an unthreatening action result in heavy fees and possible jail time? After the break, we’ll discuss what the ruling means for the future of the mobile industry, how it will impact consumers and if we should worry that our dentist’s uncle’s third cousin (once removed) is in trouble because he has an unlocked phone.

What is unlocking?

Engadget Primed making sense of the US' new phone unlocking policy

In short, some mobile operators in the US (primarily GSM networks) choose to include restrictions on each phone they sell that prevents you from being able to put in a SIM card from a different network. For instance, if you put a T-Mobile SIM in a locked AT&T phone, you’ll be greeted by a message telling you that your card isn’t supported and you won’t get any service. (You can dial 911, but that’s all.) Unfortunately, this restriction also includes operators around the world, so international travelers would be subject to outrageous roaming fees for calls, texts and data.

Fortunately, you’re not completely stuck; most operators have policies that allow you to receive a code to unlock your device under specific conditions. Typically you need to be a loyal customer in good standing for a certain period of time, and you need to have a valid reason for unlocking it, such as going out of the country or being in the military. Regardless of the flexible policy many of them have, carriers are still the gatekeepers, and it’s up to them to decide whether or not you deserve the code to unlock your device.

The ruling

The Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA), which was passed in 1998, states: “no person shall circumvent a technological measure that effectively controls access to a work protected under this title.” However, because Congress recognized that things can quickly change over the passage of time, the governing body added a provision that allows the Library of Congress (of which the Copyright Office is a branch) to provide exemptions to the law once every three years. Once proposals are submitted, hearings are held in DC and a select West Coast city the summer before the ruling. These hearings are the chance for each side of the debate to present evidence that supports their respective arguments. In this case, the question was whether or not the ability to unlock phones falls under fair use.

After the hearings, the Register of Copyrights (the head of the Copyright Office, a position currently held by Maria Pallante) determines if these proposals should in fact become official, and submits those findings to the Librarian of Congress, who gets the final say. But the final decision isn’t permanent; once the three years are over, each exemption expires and needs to go through the same exact process. The Register makes a decision as if the evidence is being presented for the very first time.

This is where the phone-locking issue comes in. In 2006 and 2010, the Register allowed an exemption which gave customers the ability to legally bypass the carrier to get their phones unlocked. In 2012, however, that same exemption was denied. If you purchased a locked handset after January 26th, 2013, the only way to legally remove that lock is if you get permission (and thus, a code) directly from your carrier. If the device was already unlocked when you bought it, you’re safe.

In what way are phone locks tied in with copyright law? According to Tyler Ochoa, a professor of law at Santa Clara University and an expert in copyright law, “The work that’s protected by copyright in this case is the software that operates the phone. It’s protected by a technological measure, namely more software, that prevents you from getting access to the phone’s software without the permission of the copyright owner, which is typically the entity selling you the phone.”

Essentially, these restrictions are considered part of the firmware or software of the device, and thus are a copyrighted work that cannot be circumvented. Section 1201 of the DMCA states: “No person shall circumvent a technological measure that effectively controls access to a work protected under this title.” It’s a pretty broad section of law, which is likely why exemptions were granted to this particular issue, but phone locking can technically be applied to fit this rule. In terms of control, operators see subsidy locks as a way to control the investment they’ve made in individual customers, since they provide immediate discounts to the phone in exchange for a two-year commitment. An early termination fee (ETF) is assessed whenever customers breach their contracts, but the CTIA argues the subsidy is often larger than those fees. There’s also the possibility that customers choose not to pay the ETF and take a hit on their credit reports.

Engadget Primed making sense of the US' new phone unlocking policy

But don’t we own the phones that we purchased with our own money? Can’t we do whatever we want with them? Ochoa argues that while we own our phones, we may not own the software that comes loaded on them — which, of course, includes digital locks.

“That’s a technological protection measure, and you’re not allowed to hack around it without the authorization of the copyright owner,” he said. “The copyright owner says you don’t own your phone software, you license it. They say you’re actually leasing software instead of purchasing.”

While we own our phones, we may not own the software that comes loaded on them.

This argument is primarily based on the ruling for Vernor v. Autodesk, which holds that ”a software user is a licensee rather than an owner of a copy where the copyright owner (1) Specifies that the user is granted a license; (2) significantly restricts the user’s ability to transfer the software; and (3) imposes notable use restrictions.” In this case, phone users fall under the category of licensee, thereby leaving us at the mercy of the copyright owners. (How jailbreaking falls under the DMCA exemption and phone locks do not is another discussion altogether, but apparently there’s enough legal evidence to allow it.)

Interestingly, Ochoa argues that carriers are not the actual copyright owners of the software that comes on locked devices — the manufacturers are. But what do they get out of the deal?

“The manufacturers probably don’t care much one way or the other, except that carriers are their biggest customers,” he said. “If the carriers don’t want you to unlock it, then manufacturers will go along with that and say, ‘We don’t want you to unlock it either.’ If you buy your phone direct from the manufacturer, they’ll probably be willing to let you unlock it.”

Arguments

DNP Engadget Primed making sense of the US' new phone unlocking policyWhy would the Register make such a decision? If the exemption was granted twice in a row, what’s lawfully different this time around? To answer that, we’ll first discuss the arguments made at the hearings (found here and here) — both for and against the exemption — and then explore the logic behind the decision.

Pros: Four major companies fought for the exemption to be extended: Consumers Union, Youghiogheny Communications, MetroPCS and the Competitive Carriers Association. You may have heard of MetroPCS, a large prepaid carrier, but what about the other guys? Consumers Union is a nonprofit that publishes Consumer Reports magazine; the Competitive Carriers Association used to be known as the Rural Carriers Association and consists of more than 100 carrier members across the country; and Youghiogheny is a communications company based in Texas.

Below are the proponents’ official arguments, as stated by the Federal Register:

  • “Owners of mobile phones are also the owners of the copies of the computer programs on those phones and that, as owners, they are entitled to exercise their rights under Section 117, which gives the owner of a copy of a computer program the privilege to make or authorize the making of another copy or adaptation of that computer program under certain circumstances, such as to permit the program to be used on a particular machine.”
  • “Ending the exemption will lead to higher device prices for consumers, increased electronic waste, higher costs associated with switching service providers and widespread mobile customer ‘lock-in.”’
  • “Some devices sold by carriers are permanently locked and because unlocking policies contain restrictions and may not apply to all of a carrier’s devices. Software locks are impediments to a competitive marketplace. Absent the exemption, consumers would be forced to continue to do business with the carrier that sold the device to the consumer in the first instance, or to discard the device.”
  • “If enough customers have the ability and propensity to switch service providers in response to a change in price or non-price factors, then mobile wireless service providers will have an incentive to compete vigorously to gain customers and retain their current customers.”

The proponents also reviewed some of the findings of the 2006 and 2010 cases. In those exemptions, they argued, the Register declared the practice of software locking a handset was limited to support a business model, rather than to protect access to a copyrighted work, and was “a business decision that had little to do with the interests protected under copyright law.”

Cons: And in this corner was the CTIA, a trade association that represents all four national carriers, several regional networks and most major handset manufacturers. Because it’s such an important issue to a few of its member companies — Tracfone, AT&T and T-Mobile appear to be the most interested in the group — it makes perfect sense why the CTIA would get involved.

Here are some of the points they made for declining an exemption (again, as mentioned in the official docs):

  • “An exemption for unlocking is not necessary because ‘the largest nationwide carriers have liberal, publicly available unlocking policies,’ and because unlocked phones are ‘freely available from third party providers — many at low prices.'”
  • “The industry has been plagued by ‘large-scale phone trafficking operations’ that buy large quantities of pre-paid phones, unlock them and resell them in foreign markets where carriers do not subsidize handsets.”
  • “Owners of wireless devices do not necessarily own the software on those devices.”
  • “The practice of locking cellphones is an essential part of the wireless industry’s predominant business model.”

Final verdict: After weighing the evidence that was presented before the Register, she came to the following conclusions:

  • “There are ample alternatives to circumvention. That is, the marketplace has evolved such that there is now a wide array of unlocked phone options available to consumers. While it is true that not every wireless device is available unlocked, and wireless carriers’ unlocking policies are not free from all restrictions, the record clearly demonstrates that there is a wide range of alternatives from which consumers may choose in order to obtain an unlocked wireless phone.”
  • Concerning legacy devices: “The record demonstrated that there is significant consumer interest in and demand for using legacy phones on carriers other than the one that originally sold the phone to the consumer. It also supported a finding that owners of legacy phones — especially phones that have not been used on any wireless network for some period of time — may have difficulty obtaining unlocking codes from wireless carriers, in part because an older or expired contract might not require the carrier to cooperate.”
  • “The Register concluded after a review of the statutory factors that an exemption to the prohibition on circumvention of mobile phone computer programs to permit users to unlock ‘legacy’ phones is both warranted and unlikely to harm the market for such programs. At the same time, in light of carriers’ current unlocking policies and the ready availability of new unlocked phones in the marketplace, the record did not support an exemption for newly purchased phones. Looking to precedents in copyright law, the Register recommended that the class designated by the Librarian include a 90-day transitional period to allow unlocking by those who may acquire phones shortly after the new exemption goes into effect.”

In other words, the ability to circumvent carrier-locked handsets was removed because consumers have a choice to pursue alternative options, and carriers have an unlock policy that’s somewhat flexible. An exemption on legacy handsets, on the other hand, was supported because of “significant consumer interest and large demand” and because people “may have difficulty obtaining unlocking codes from wireless carriers, in part because an older or expired contract might not require the carrier to cooperate.”

The exemption was removed because consumers have too many alternative options available.

The last statement is a little confusing; the ruling seems to indicate that “legacy phones” are only devices that were purchased prior to January 26th, yet the wording supports the argument that any device that’s served its two-year commitment should be exempt from the DMCA. Two years from today, will customers have the same right to unlock their phone that current legacy customers do?

How will this affect consumers?

DNP Engadget Primed making sense of the US' new phone unlocking policy

Regardless of how anyone feels about the Librarian’s decision, it’s still set in stone for at least another three years. During this time, how will we — the loyal consumers — be impacted by this decision? When it comes to regular day-to-day life, it probably won’t make a huge difference to most people. Carrier unlocking policies appear to be exactly the same, so international travelers who are in good standing should still be able to receive unlock codes without too much pain involved. You also have the option, as the Register concluded, to head to retailers that sell phones that are already unlocked. (Unfortunately, in AT&T’s case, you may have to do more hunting around if you’re looking for devices that are compatible with its LTE network.)

Nothing is stopping mobile operators from declining your unlock request. The ball is in their court.

With the additional restrictions in place, however, it’s hard to say without a doubt that carriers will continue to be flexible with their unlock policies, since there’s nothing stopping them from becoming more strict. If this occurs, consumers who are denied an unlock code from their carrier of choice will only have two options: either buy an unlocked phone or swallow an expensive ETF and change carriers, though the latter option will still involve purchasing a new device anyway. (Both AT&T and T-Mobile representatives insist that the policy hasn’t changed, but it’s difficult to know if this will be the case in the long-term future.)

Additionally, consumers are impacted once they decide to sell their locked device after the contract terms expire. Many proponents argue that it’s much harder to sell locked devices because of the severe limitations placed upon them, and if they are sold, the cost will be much lower. Of course, if you’re at the point where you’re ready to sell your device, it’s most likely because you’re out of contract with your preferred network; the good news is, once your contract is over (or if you paid full retail price and opted out of a contract), your carrier should be much more amenable to providing an unlock code with no questions asked. The reality of the matter, however, is that the ball is still in its court. You’ll have to approach your carrier, and there’s nothing stopping it from declining your request.

Despite the hit that this restriction takes to our perception of freedom and phone ownership, there’s one piece of silver lining for the consumer: it’s an opportunity for consumers to be educated on the benefits of buying an unlocked device, and to realize there really are more choices available in the US than phones that are sitting on the shelves of carrier retail stores.

How will this affect businesses?

It all depends on which side of business you fall on. Companies that rely solely on providing unlock codes to customers are likely going to have a difficult time surviving — without the carriers noticing, at least. On the flipside, however, businesses that focus primarily on selling phones that have never been locked or touched by the carriers are not as likely to be adversely affected.

In fact, the opposite may very well happen. Ryan Negri, founder and CEO of Negri Electronics, explained to us that sales have actually gone up since the ruling took effect.

“We’re doing very well on the OEM devices that are never carrier-locked … Even though [unlocked phones] cost more at retail, we’re able to sell it to them as is, with US charger, without bloatware; and even though it’s more expensive, people are still saving money on it because they’re taking it to prepaid,” Negri said.

DNP Engadget Primed making sense of the US' new phone unlocking policy

According to Negri, there’s more to the big picture than increased sales. He’s hopeful that this ruling will weed out many of the unethical practices that have been taking place in recent years.

“A lot of companies have runners, or people that buy devices from different stores or from people on Craigslist, verify the merchandise and then sell it to [that company],” Negri said. “Some of them aren’t ethical. They’ll go into AT&T, say they have a business account, buy 10 lines and then sell those $199 phones for $450. They don’t tell people they got the phones this way. By disallowing these runners to just walk into a store and buy phones [this way], it cleans up the industry. You’ll only have ethical people involved. It’s a huge issue in our industry — ethics, period. It’s so hard to find honest and trustworthy people to buy and sell to. I believe that having this law will minimize the amount of people getting involved, and will clean it up. It’s going to be a good change for the industry, but it’ll hurt manufacturers and carriers.”

“It’s going to be a good change for the industry, but it’ll hurt manufacturers and carriers.”

That doesn’t mean the ruling makes everything perfect for third-party phone retailers. Negri commented that this decision may cause more people to question companies that sell unlocked phones; while many existing businesses have established a relationship of trust with a large clientele, some industry newcomers will be viewed as shady without being given the opportunity to establish themselves.

How will this affect mobile operators?

Engadget Primed making sense of the US' new phone unlocking policyWhile Negri believes a cleaner industry will hurt manufacturers and carriers, most of those companies likely have a much brighter outlook on what will happen in the next three years. In fact, as we mentioned earlier, phone trafficking was one of the central arguments in the CTIA’s case against an exemption.

According to Michael Altschul, SVP and legal counsel for the CTIA, prepaid companies like Tracfone were the hardest hit by traffickers.

“There were organized groups purchasing Tracfone devices and then unlocking them and reselling them in Mexico and other countries that use the same frequencies,” Altschul said. “It was an arbitrage scheme. You’d buy it in the US and there wasn’t a contract, but there was a software lock to keep the device locked to the Tracfone prepaid service. The phones would get unlocked and sold outside the US, closer to the retail price than they were being sold at in the US. Tracfone was very concerned that this kind of widespread practice was a real threat to their ability to provide discounted handsets and grow their business.”

Tracfone has fought a seven-year battle against phone traffickers, and copyright protection is one more tool it can add to the toolbox.

This is all part of a battle that Tracfone has fought since 2006, filing lawsuits against hundreds of accused phone traffickers in the last seven years. Up until this year, however, the company’s only weapon was in the area of trademark law. Now that phone unlocking is no longer exempt from copyright law, Tracfone has another tool to fight with.

Does this really hurt business models? Were carriers losing money under this exemption? While it’s quite likely that Tracfone was indeed experiencing some sort of setback due to trafficking, it’s hard not to wonder exactly what kind of effect the exemption had on postpaid networks like AT&T and T-Mobile, if any. AT&T’s business model has changed only slightly over the last few years, and the concept of contracts and phone subsidies has remained unaffected. A quick look at the company’s quarterly results indicates that if any money has been lost because of the exemption, it likely isn’t much, and shareholders don’t seem to be very upset about it.

Engadget Primed making sense of the US' new phone unlocking policy

T-Mobile, on the other hand, has recently focused its efforts on rebranding to an “uncarrier” that warmly welcomes unlocked handsets — even iPhones — onto its network, and offers lower monthly prices for consumers that choose to go this route. If anything, an exemption would appear to encourage this business model, not hinder it.

Of course, not every mobile operator has the same attitude toward the ruling. Nearly all of the proponents supporting an exemption were carriers, which means there’s a large difference in opinion between smaller regional networks and big guns like AT&T and Tracfone.

Are we going to be sued?

DNP Engadget Primed making sense of the US' new phone unlocking policy

(Image credit: Amazon)

Under the DMCA, penalties for unlocking devices can be ridiculous — the Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF), an advocacy group focused on defending digital rights for the consumer, says that it’s “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.'” Does this mean you need to hide in the basement and wrap your illegally unlocked phone in tinfoil? For Joe Plumber, probably not.

“I’m not aware that carriers have any appetite for going after individuals,” Altschul told us.

Businesses, on the other hand, may feel a little more pressure from carriers to stop their copyright-infringing practices, but only if their activities appear carriers’ radars. According to Ochoa, “What’s likely to happen is that if the phone carriers find evidence that someone is offering software that unlocks the phone on the internet, they’ll send a notice to try to get that software removed. If it looks like a software provider is a repeat player or is making a lot of money, the phone carriers will likely try to sue him.”

What can we do about it?

If you’re strictly opposed to the ruling, then you’re in for a bout of depression. As we mentioned earlier, the next decision on exemptions will come in the fall of 2015; proposals and comments will be accepted by the Copyright Office in the fall of 2014. If you want to see a change, the best course of action is to make sure there’s enough interest in the issue and motivate enough groups and individuals with influence to get involved in the process.

DNP Engadget Primed making sense of the US' new phone unlocking policy

As of this writing, there is one possible way to get someone’s attention in Washington: a petition to the White House. Immediately after the ruling went into effect, Sina Khanifar, co-founder at OpenSignal.com, drafted a petition stating “we ask that the White House ask the Librarian of Congress to rescind this decision, and failing that, champion a bill that makes unlocking permanently legal.” If it reaches the 100,000-signature threshold, it will require a response from the White House, but there is absolutely no guarantee that anything can or will be done to reverse the decision. (Don’t forget, the petition for the US government to build a Death Star got enough signatures, but the White House wasn’t favorable to the idea.)

Ochoa explained that even with a petition in place, the three-year statute is a legislatively mandated process.

“If you want to try getting Congress to pass a law, great, but Congress can’t even agree on much of anything these days,” he said. “Frankly, cellphone carriers have more lobbying power than you do. Unless you have a lot of congressional staffers that want to unlock their phones, that’s not likely to happen.”

Even if Congress decides to take action, a potential bill could either be quickly shot down or delayed for an indeterminate amount of time. At least the petition, which has until February 23rd to collect signatures, could serve as a voice of the people when the next exemptions come around in 2015.

In another unlikely scenario, the EFF claims that “if lawsuits happen, the courts should recognize that the DMCA is being misused, and refuse to apply it to anti-competitive software locks.” But it’s not quite such a cut-and-dry notion. For a more specific answer, we turn once again to Professor Ochoa to explain:

If someone was sued for unlocking a phone, they would not have an exemption from the DMCA. But that doesn’t mean they’ve necessarily violated the DMCA; it just means they’re not exempt from the DMCA. A court would have to decide whether the DMCA was in fact violated. Jurisdiction over copyright matters is exclusively federal, so any federal court would have jurisdiction to interpret the DMCA and decide whether the DMCA was, in fact, violated. The copyright owner who claims the DMCA was violated would choose which of the federal district courts in which to file suit… the decision of that federal district court would then be subject to appeal in the US Court of Appeals for the circuit in which the district court is located.

Courts can interpret the DMCA on a case-by-case basis, but this doesn’t actually overrule decisions made by the Librarian of Congress. The only entity that has that power is the US Court of Appeals in Washington. And even then, the decision to adopt (or not adopt) exemptions comes only if that decision was “arbitrary and capricious” — in other words, if the court had reason to believe such a decision was made without evidence to support it.

The lack of legal options may be a disappointment, but you still have other choices to consider. For instance, if you’re a Verizon customer, several phones are capable of global roaming and come SIM-unlocked, which means you can stick any GSM SIM into the handset. And as we mentioned earlier, T-Mobile offers a lenient policy, often encouraging customers to bring their own unlocked phones (including the iPhone) onto its network and pay a lower monthly bill.

The best way to combat the ruling is to speak with your wallet and show your carrier that you’re not willing to purchase a restricted phone.

Finally, you can speak with your wallet; show the operator that you’re not willing to purchase a restricted phone, and instead simply purchase an unlocked handset through an independent retailer. There are also plenty of prepaid and MVNO options (such as Straight Talk) that are readily available and oftentimes for a lower price than what you’d find on direct carriers.

Wrap-up: Is this really a big deal?

Engadget Primed making sense of the US' new phone unlocking policy

Doom, gloom and gnashing of teeth aside, most people probably won’t even realize there’s been any change at all. You can still purchase unlocked phones through an independent retailer and there’s always the option of going through your carrier to get an unlock code (hence the Register’s decision), but let’s face it: the ruling is more of a primer on the sad state of the mobile industry in the United States. While our neighbors to the north are working on legislation that would prevent mobile operators from locking their devices, we’re seemingly heading the opposite direction. Instead of asking our nation’s largest carriers to become more open and transparent to consumers, we’re encouraging them to be more closed and restrictive.

It’s slightly ironic that shackles have been added to our carrier-locked phones because of the progress our industry has made in offering unlocked devices en masse. Sure, the ruling comes with a few benefits, but at what cost? It’s difficult to understand how a lift on this exemption will enable healthy competition among carriers, let alone what kind of impact it has on their business models, but we’ll just have to wait it out to see. After all, our mobile landscape may look drastically different in three years — and we can only hope it’s for the better.

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Apple’s Upgrade Dilemma

Apple has been taking a beating on Wall Street, in part due to skepticism over future growth of iPhone and iPad sales. With the market becoming saturated with iPhone and, to some extent, iPad users, Apple will soon need to rely upon upgrades rather than new customers to fuel sales. Apple’s problem is that their products are so good, people aren’t upgrading fast enough. More »

2014 Chevrolet Impala Protects Your Gear and Data in a Hidden Cubby

Chevrolet has announced an cool new protection feature available in properly equipped 2014 Impala sedans. The feature is available on vehicles that have the Chevrolet MyLink system installed it features an eight-inch center stack display supporting touch. Behind that screen is a hidden storage locker that is large enough for items such as your smartphone, wallet, or iPod.

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The driver can set a four-digit PIN that prevents anyone from being able to see or access the items placed in the cubby, which is hidden behind the eight-inch touchscreen. Not only does that PIN number protect your items stashed away in your secret hiding place, it also protects the data stored in the infotainment system. When you enter your pin number, the system locks down your contacts and addresses preventing unauthorized people from viewing them, which provides additional protection when valet parking.

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Chevrolet says that the idea is to make the hidden storage container similar to a hotel safe. When you enter the code, the screen slides up allowing you to access the storage space. Chevrolet says that the storage cubbt was made possible by moving the electronics for the MyLink system from behind the touchscreen to another part of the vehicle.

Facebook Hates Old People

Congrats, you turned 100. You lived through the Great Depression, World Wars I and II, and hammer pants, but Facebook doesn’t give a crap. Apparently, it stops counting age at 99. What’s with this disgusting ageism, Facebook? More »

Playstation 4 Release In November For $429 and $529 [Rumor]

Playstation 4 Release In November For $429 and $529 [Rumor]Sony Playstation 4 will be released in November this year, with two versions priced at $429 and $529 according to rumors.  The console codenamed Orbis, whose official name has not been released yet, might be unveiled at tonight’s Playstation event in New York City. However pricing for the units might not be released until the third quarter. (more…)

By Ubergizmo. Related articles: PS4 Sports 6x Blu-ray Drive, 8-Core AMD Processor And 8GB RAM, Sony PlayStation 4 Event Wrap-Up,

With $650K In Seed Funding, YC-Backed Upverter Chases The Dream Of A Hardware Startup Revolution

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Toronto’s Upverter is a startup that’s poised to effect change that could reshape the landscape of entrepreneurship. That’s not something you can say about most of the businesses we cover on a daily basis, whether or not they have good ideas. But it’s definitely true of Upverter, the company that’s hoping to build a cloud-based hardware engineering platform that can match and overtake its desktop-based counterparts within the next few years.

So what would that mean for the messy, expensive business of hardware prototyping and product creation? Nothing less than the beginning of a new era, according to Upverter CEO and co-founder Zak Homuth.

“The three of us that founded the company all kind of come from a mixed hardware/software background, we all studied electrical engineering, we all worked co-op jobs at startups all around the world, did a little bit of hardware and a little bit of software,” he explained in an interview. “And then we got together to try to improve the rate of innovation with hardware. We all ran away from it, because it was easier to build software than to build hardware, and we wanted to fix that, because we wanted to build hardware personally.”












The idea was to make tools that would allow Homuth and his co-founders to build a hardware company as their next startup venture, so they quit their jobs, sold their possessions to get some working capital and moved to Homuth’s parents basements, with the nascent idea of building an engineering platform that lives entirely in the cloud. For the fledgling startup, the question was whether or not they could build a GitHub for hardware, how cloud-based it could be, and whether that was something anyone even wanted. Flash forward four months.

“Then we got into Y Combinator, picked the company up, moved it down to Mountain View and got this shitty little townhouse across from YC,” he said. “By that time we’d figured out that the solution to the version control problem, the innovation problem, the crowdsourcing problem was to move it all to the cloud, and specifically the tools. Because if you move the tools to the cloud you make it possible to control the file format, so that you can do version control, you can control consumption, you can control the viewer.”

Upverter launched a very simple version to a very controlled group before coming out of YC, and then took that MVP-style product into something that could be used by the general public in September of 2011. “It couldn’t really do much,” Homuth admits. “But it was the line in the sand that allowed us to say ‘Does anybody wanted to do engineering this way, instead of the way you’ve been doing it for 30 years?’ and we got enough ‘yesses’ that we kept working on it.”

The company has since been tracking down money, building out its tools to a point where they actually compete with existing design tools, via a release just a few short months ago. Upverter has raised $650,000 so far from angel investors, including YouTube founding team member Christina Brodbeck, and Xobni co-founder Adam Smith, and that has managed to allow them to build a software tool that begins to be able to compete with existing tools. But there’s still a long way to go, Homuth says.

“It’s not at parity by any means, it can’t do everything that $100,000 software can do yet, but you can do non-zero stuff,” he said. “You can actually get stuff manufactured, you can actually simulate, you can actually manage a product’s life cycle, you can actually design. And that was step one in our three step plan to change engineering.”

Step two is to get the platform to parity with existing tools

Step two is to get the platform to that parity point, where it can compete with existing tools on an equal footing with legacy software. Getting to a point where they can design equally well in a browser as with a desktop tool is around six months away, according to Homuth, at which point Upverter will be able to start building out its sales and marketing team. Once it gets there, Upverter will have built in a little over three years what legacy CAD companies have taken 30 years to create. The next goal, beyond that, is to become the “Rosetta Stone of engineering,” meaning that no matter how you come at engineering, no matter what tools you’re using, it’ll translate and you can work with anyone else in the world on the same files and on the same projects.

Upverter’s ultimate goal is still at least a couple of years away, Homuth says, and the time it takes to get there will be dependent on what kind of money the startup can raise. He’s actively looking for fresh investment now, while also continuing to add to the 10,000-strong user base it has managed to attract so far.

The rise of Upverter means a potential explosion on the horizon for hardware startups, which is why the company is hosting a hardware hackathon with Y Combinator on February 23rd. Making hardware engineering collaborative, affordable and easy to access can have a tremendous impact on the cost of doing business and risks associated with creating new hardware, which is why Upverter achieving its goals could lead to a new revolution for hardware startups, incubators and investors alike.

If you happen to be one of those hardware startups, Upverter is offering free team accounts to TC readers. Just follow this link to sign up.

The Science of What Makes Junk Food So Addicting (And Delicious)

It’s basically impossible to stop eating junk food. And it’s like that for a reason. There are billions and billions of dollars at play in Big Snack, and those corporations want to keep it that way. The New York Times has an exhaustive and fairly massive feature about how junk food companies use everything from economic theory to chemistry to experimental psychology to keep you eating it. More »

HTC posts video of its One unveiling event, get your UltraPixels here

HTC posts video of its One unveiling event, get your UltraPixels here

HTC fans who couldn’t get into the company’s launch events for the One (which is most of them, if we’re honest) don’t have to just imagine what it was like. The company has posted both a full-length stream of its main event in London as well as an abridged, 4.5-minute version that includes slices of the New York City gathering. Either way, viewers will receive more than their fair share of BoomSound, UltraPixels and other SuperlativeNouns. Head past the break for the full presentation, and hit the source for the snack-sized version.

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Source: HTC (YouTube)