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Hey guys,
I like to mess with electronics. I have a modded Ps3, xbox360, HTC HD2, my brand new G2x, which I have just rooted. My next step is I would like to unlock the phone.
I am fairly new to phone modding, so even though I have a decent grasp on it, there are some things I can't get a grip on.
I am having a hell of a time trying to unlock the phone myself. I know I can use a service online, or even call T-mobile, to get a code, but why is it so hard to do myself. If I understand it right, the phone is locked using some, unknown to me, logarithim(sp).
This is driving me nuts. If i wanted to I can get free games for my PS3, XBOX360, even Android apps. Although, the intention of this post is not to condone piracy, as I am sure the forums would agree, I just wonder why these "unlocker" services, hold this information under lock and key. I would think that the information is out there is one looks hard enough. I know that they do it for money, and have businesses dedicated to unlocking everyphone. Whether what they are doing is legal or not, I have no idea, but I would think there would be a PDF, and site, telling one how to do it themselves.
I have downloaded countless unlocking softwares,none that I found new enough for the G2x. Then I found some sites that sell actual hardware, that usually have a couple of phone brands, build into the firmware(i dunno) to unlock those companies brands.
If these unlockers, use the hardware to unlock phones, then I can understand, why they charge cause some of that stuff is really expensive! I would just think the one would be able to unlock with software only.
If anyone can shed some light on this subject I would really appricieate(sp) it.
Not sure if links of this type are allowed, but if they are could someone point me in the right direction.
If not, maybe some direction on what to search within google.
(& yes I have scoured google hours on end, only coming across site that will do it for you for a price.)
Thanks guys
Call tmo and ask for the code. I dont understand why your head is about to explode from this.
Sent from my HTC Vision (G2x in disguise)
wow, did you not even bother to read the post??
Oh I read it. I just dont see why u would want to bother trying this if you could just ask tmo for it for free. Takes all of 5 minutes.
On the other hand, if you were trying to make some money off this, i can see why you'd be interested.
Sent from my HTC Vision (G2x in disguise)
But I am pretty sure those unlock companies get their codes from Tmo as well..
Sent from my butt using XDA Premium App
hi i know this is kinda irrelevant but did the law passed last year really prevent ppl from making unlocking software like redsn0w, yellowsn0w, pwnage for the iphone 5s?
i dont see any available and the last update was like 3 years ago. is the iphone no longer unlockable except for the paid online services for 100-200 dollars?
thanks!
yinxzon said:
hi i know this is kinda irrelevant but did the law passed last year really prevent ppl from making unlocking software like redsn0w, yellowsn0w, pwnage for the iphone 5s?
i dont see any available and the last update was like 3 years ago. is the iphone no longer unlockable except for the paid online services for 100-200 dollars?
thanks!
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
1) Software unlocked stopped working after the first couple of basebands on the iPhone 4. The baseband is basically too tightly locked for those types of hacks.
2) AFAIK it is not illegal to unlock a device.
3) This site is for Android an Windows Phone, not iOS. We don't do iOS here at all. You might check out another iPhone site for more info.
i know its android forum, i hate everything aapl so i dont wanna register there.
i think its a law:
http://www.cultofmac.com/213144/unl...king-is-still-safe-what-it-all-means-for-you/
but i didnt think that would stop anyone. i guess ur reasoning for complicated basebands makes sense.
there is just so many imei unlocks for a lot of money and if its cheap who knows if it would work..
thanks
yinxzon said:
i know its android forum, i hate everything aapl so i dont wanna register there.
i think its a law:
http://www.cultofmac.com/213144/unl...king-is-still-safe-what-it-all-means-for-you/
but i didnt think that would stop anyone. i guess ur reasoning for complicated basebands makes sense.
there is just so many imei unlocks for a lot of money and if its cheap who knows if it would work..
thanks
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
According to that article, the law would go into effect in 9 days from today, and it's not illegal to go thru the carriers.
Software unlocks are not going to happen, other than using a SIM interposer, like R-Sim etc..
I don't know if using a SIM interposer would be illegal though, since technically you are not unlocking the phone or modifying the hardware in any way, you are only changing the way the signal goes from the SIM card to the phone, so technically you might be safe.
Practically, I don't see anyone actually getting prosecuted for "unlocking their iPhone" anyways.
But the only way right now is the a SIM interposer (check compatibility of the model and iOS version) or go thru carrier, or pay a premium price for 3rd party.
But yeah, since this forum does not cover or support iOS you're better off finding a forum that actually supports it.
yeah i understand, just fyi that article write jan 26 2013 not 14.
like this: http://iphone-unlocker-pro.com/?gclid=CI_y86zthbwCFaTm7AodOzUAUQ or http://www.officialiphoneunlock.co.uk/unlock-iphone/ATT-USA/
You would probably be able to find a lot more information over here:
http://forum.iphone-developers.com/
:good:
I recently acquired an Apple iPhone 6 for my wife for free ( don't ask its not illegal just complicated) Problem is its locked to T mobile ( same service I had) and since I didn't buy it they wont; unlock it because they say they have no record of it so...........
How do I factory unlock an iPhone 6 so that it can be used on any providers network. I've been told that I use the same IMEI method as on Androids, I have been told by one site that I needed to buy their software (26.99) and jailbreak the phone and that will unlock it ( yea I fell for it). But I really really want my wife to be able to use this iPhone 6 as hers, I have itunes and I have her ios backed up, and I can wipe the current iphone and restore her stuff onto it with no problem, I even have a free app that jailbreaks it ( imagine that after paying 26 usd)
Acn somebody either tell me a 100 % effective way or please point me to an iphoen forum, as for some reason my android self can;t seem to remove that mental block about iphone sites LOL
Redsn0w. If that's still around. Anyway, you can't unlock an iPhone conventionally as the process is tied to iTunes. It must be jailbroken.
Thanks I can jailbeark it ball day long, believe or not that part is easier than my Samsung S4.
Does red snow unlock it too?
Sent from my SGH-M919 using XDA Free mobile app
Well, I was I'll advised. The last time I tinkered with iOS was in the 3GS days... It was possible to unlock them back then. I'm sorry you were scammed
I'm doing as much research as I can with everything else I'm doing at the same time, I even went do far as to call Apple, the guy I spoke to there seemed to know exactly what he was talking about and said it can't be done unless its done by the carrier, which puts me back at square 1 dealing with t mobiles idiots. I got to keep trying though, cause if I end up buying her a new phone as His is my witness I will NEVER own a phone that is locked to one particular carrier, and I will NEVER have one in my house with a specific carriers name on it
Sent from my SGH-M919 using XDA Free mobile app
Really?
Ok, all iPhone hatred aside - This is a forum for mobile devices. Not just any, however. This site does NOT feature any sort of support for iPhone or any iOS device. This is a developer's website, and the iOS platform is nothing short of an absolute nightmare to work with.
Furthermore on this, I find it mildly insulting that you, as an ignorant iPhone user, think you can just waltz onto the scene and start treating this place like we're a local fix-it group for all smartphone problems. I speak on behalf of those who hate iPhone, and quite frankly I say, "We're not your personal fix-it store - we're a developer hub for those platforms that are actually decent to work with.".
I would like to finish here by saying that:
A) iPhone is not a good phone, and never will be.
B) This is not your personal fix-it store
C) We're not here to solve every Harry Hardwalk and Sally Sobstory's phone problems
D) If you do require iPhone help, might I suggest going to XDA's sister-site, http://iPhone-developers.com
Good bye, sir. Maybe one day you will see the light and praise the holy Android.
wolfen1086 said:
I recently acquired an Apple iPhone 6 for my wife for free ( don't ask its not illegal just complicated) Problem is its locked to T mobile ( same service I had) and since I didn't buy it they wont; unlock it because they say they have no record of it so...........
How do I factory unlock an iPhone 6 so that it can be used on any providers network. I've been told that I use the same IMEI method as on Androids, I have been told by one site that I needed to buy their software (26.99) and jailbreak the phone and that will unlock it ( yea I fell for it). But I really really want my wife to be able to use this iPhone 6 as hers, I have itunes and I have her ios backed up, and I can wipe the current iphone and restore her stuff onto it with no problem, I even have a free app that jailbreaks it ( imagine that after paying 26 usd)
Acn somebody either tell me a 100 % effective way or please point me to an iphoen forum, as for some reason my android self can;t seem to remove that mental block about iphone sites LOL
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
You only option is a IMEI unlock service. A T-Mobile iPhone 6 unlock goes for about $140 on eBay. That really is your only option other than selling the iPhone 6 on eBay and then purchasing an unlocked one. Ever since IMEI unlocks became possible, all interest in hacking the baseband for iPhones died.
So do the IMEI unlock services reall unlock a iphone?
One of those is whatvibusedvto unlock the androids, but I was told that it doesntvwork on an iphone, besides thevservicevi usedcwas 29.99 each my S4 andv2 S5s butvthey want 140 for an iphone 6 and 5 thru 7 days.
If it does work, please explain how it works cause I'm kinda curious
Sent from my SGH-M919 using XDA Free mobile app
wolfen1086 said:
So do the IMEI unlock services reall unlock a iphone?
One of those is whatvibusedvto unlock the androids, but I was told that it doesntvwork on an iphone, besides thevservicevi usedcwas 29.99 each my S4 andv2 S5s butvthey want 140 for an iphone 6 and 5 thru 7 days.
If it does work, please explain how it works cause I'm kinda curious
Sent from my SGH-M919 using XDA Free mobile app
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I hate to say, but Apple has a database of IMEIs and the unlock is processed through iTunes once the carrier updates your entry in the mighty database. It used to be possible to hack the baseband on a jailbroken phone to unlock it.
The reality is, I doubt Apple would let third parties update IMEI entries in their database. Otherwise there wouldn't really be a point...
So your saying that there really is a huge database, I've heard that on the internet before. So I guess I should research thease companies that say they can cause the guy at apple said kinda made mevthink that Apple thinks its messed up that that t mobile would sell me a locked phone for the same price they sell me a unlocked phone. Ever since the conversation ibhsd with him ibfeel even more ripped off
Sent from my SGH-M919 using XDA Free mobile app
wolfen1086 said:
So your saying that there really is a huge database, I've heard that on the internet before. So I guess I should research thease companies that say they can cause the guy at apple said kinda made mevthink that Apple thinks its messed up that that t mobile would sell me a locked phone for the same price they sell me a unlocked phone. Ever since the conversation ibhsd with him ibfeel even more ripped off
Sent from my SGH-M919 using XDA Free mobile app
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Kind of. The carriers can submit IMEIs to Apple for unlocking. Most of these unlocks are done through employees at the carriers submitting IMEIs for unlock when they shouldn't be. That is why the cost is so high, people are putting their job at risk moonlighting for these services.
That said, once the unlock is submitted to Apple, it is done. There is no going back. I have yet to hear about a single case of an iPhone being relocked (other than people getting their iPhone swapped for warranty/repair and ending up with a locked model) in all the years of Apple IMEI unlocking.
If you don't feel comfortable with paying for the services through eBay (use a reputable seller, and you can PayPal dispute if they try to screw you over), your ONLY other option is to sell the phone and purchase an unlocked model.
Don't waste your time looking at hacks or baseband unlocks, this isnt 2010 anymore.
HThanks, I WILL be looking on eBay for dealers and read the reviews FIRST and I guess the 26 I paid really was a scam, I know I'm probally not supposed to post the names but I'm so pissed I will. This place said that my phone would be jailbbroke and unlocked if I became a member and downloaded and used their software, turned out their softwaervobt updated the iOS to 8.1.2 from 8.1.1, then said it couldn't even jailbreak it and sent me to some Chinese site that I googled and downloaded for free, now they want to send me a hardware hack useibgvthe dim trey, they swear it works on my wife's phone, bytcatvghd same time in their site it says not for ios8.
I'm done with them, not even gonna bother trying to get a refund cause that's a lid too. But here's the site DO NOT DO BUISNESS WITH THEM TBEY ARE A RIP OFF!!!!!!
iPhone-Unlocker-Pro.com
thus site says its in Crete, but in reality its in Croatia
Sent from my SGH-M919 using XDA Free mobile app
Well I can't use the current iPhone because the idiots at T-Mobile blacklisted it even though we own it because I canceled the acct, so were now looking for one ghosts unlocked from the factory
Sent from my SGH-M919 using XDA Free mobile app
I mean come on seriously Verizon in my opinion already charges too much just for their data plans and then you pay for a $600 phone on top of it that you can't even mod, no flashing AOSP for you, no experimenting with the phone that you OWN! I switched to T-Mobile a few weeks ago just for this reason I found out TWRP came out for the S6 on T-Mobile and then I thought no way am I going to miss out on CM and other AOSP ROMS I love having the ability to change my kernel and ROM sure there is SafeStrap which I don't really know when that will come out for Verizon S6 but you can't install AOSP ROMS on it there is no REAL freedom until you have an unlocked bootloader.
I made this to see how many people think like me when it comes to Verizon locking bootloaders.
Do you think Verizon owns their phones and they have every right to lock down their phones?
Or do you think you are paying these crazy amounts of money for a phone you can't even customize?
If you want to comment saying why you chose your answer that would be great! You don't have to though.
Edit: worded wrong The thing that should replace yes is "I think having a locked bootloader is fine".
I could either have an unlocked bootloader on a network with terrible service or a locked boot loader on a fantastic network. I choose the latter. Got lucky we got root but I wouldn't lose sleep over it. I would have gotten the nexus 6 if I was still that into Roms. Root will keep me very happy.
Sent from my SM-G920V using Tapatalk 2
hopesrequiem said:
I could either have an unlocked bootloader on a network with terrible service or a locked boot loader on a fantastic network. I choose the latter. Got lucky we got root but I wouldn't lose sleep over it. I would have gotten the nexus 6 if I was still that into Roms. Root will keep me very happy.
Sent from my SM-G920V using Tapatalk 2
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I understand Verizon has the best service but I am saying wouldn't it be nice to have both an unlocked bootloader for easy root and custom recoverys AND the nice Verizon service. Thanks for the response
ethanscooter said:
I understand Verizon has the best service but I am saying wouldn't it be nice to have both an unlocked bootloader for easy root and custom recoverys AND the nice Verizon service. Thanks for the response
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Omg yeah that would be THE best lol. If only the nexus 6 wasn't so big
Sent from my SM-G920V using Tapatalk 2
hopesrequiem said:
Omg yeah that would be THE best lol. If only the nexus 6 wasn't so big
Sent from my SM-G920V using Tapatalk 2
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Click to collapse
Then vote no lol that is what the poll is about no means having both unlocked bootloader and great service on the galaxy s6.
xD
Isn't your first option misleading thus skewing everyone to vote for the 2nd option? Wouldn't it be more fair to have the first option read
"Is it OK that Verizon makes the phone extra secure by locking the bootloader"
They do not own the phones unless you are leasing yours. I am also not seeing the point of this poll...to show how many here in a rooting hacking development site are unhappy because they can't do anything with the phone? I understand your frustration, I am just trying to see the point here.
Maybe you should ask if Verizon has the right to gain more commercial and military contracts by making the phone secure. Just playing devil's advocate here.
Isn't this poll akin to asking a group of kids "Who wants ice cream?" Just sayin'
KennyG123 said:
Isn't your first option misleading thus skewing everyone to vote for the 2nd option? Wouldn't it be more fair to have the first option read
"Is it OK that Verizon makes the phone extra secure by locking the bootloader"
They do not own the phones unless you are leasing yours. I am also not seeing the point of this poll...to show how many here in a rooting hacking development site are unhappy because they can't do anything with the phone? I understand your frustration, I am just trying to see the point here.
Maybe you should ask if Verizon has the right to gain more commercial and military contracts by making the phone secure. Just playing devil's advocate here.
Isn't this poll akin to asking a group of kids "Who wants ice cream?" Just sayin'
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Click to collapse
Good post. I agree.
I didn't take the poll because I feel Verizon can do whatever they like since I knew all of it up front, yet the first choice also includes an untruth....that Verizon owns the phone.
I own my phone, and I think Verizon made their choice clear before I purchased it.
Buyer beware.
Also....if you think they are just getting rich from us....I suggest you buy Verizon stock and share in the wealth.
The poll has 2 selections which are both invalid.
Bottom line is, if you wish to connect your device to the Verizon network, your device should follow their standards. Don't see a problem with that. If standardizing and locking devices keeps the network superior, I support them.
Unlocked Bootloader Is A Major Disincentive To Change Devices
As many are saying, I will not change devices (currently, Verizon HTC M8), unless I can properly mod my new device with root and recovery, and the unlocked bootloader is the absolute prerequisite for this ability to produce the optimal features, performance, and aesthetics in any new device.
Verizon made a marketing choice between selling supportability and network costs (no root means all phones allegedly have the some OS and basic settings, network has been discussed) or the cost of hiring people for support that can do more than read a script and follow a flow chart, which is what would be needed if they allowed for rooting. Also, think of the variety of phones. If they sold one brand of phone, and maybe only 2 or 3 of that brands models, supportability would not be as much of an issue.
Do I like being locked out from under the hood of my phone? No, of course not. Why else would I be on this site??
Do I understand their reasoning? Yes! Good technicians are not cheap. The person you call for tech help probably starts at under $12 an hour, and *might* have an A+ certification.
I'd rather have good cell service at a relatively reasonable rate and a variety of smartphones to choose from than pay how ever much extra it would cost to hire actual technicians to troubleshoot the myriad of issues opening the bootlocker would cost. Even with the "If you brek in, you don;t get support" type wanings, they would still have to pay hundreds iof not thousands of manhours for all the schmucks that would go in, unlock their phones, throw on custom ROM, or just start deleting files, and still call Verizon Support to fix it.
Source of my opinion - I have worked tech support for years. No amount of warnings, labels, etc will prevent customers for demanding you fix their stupidity, even when they admit that is the problem.
hopesrequiem said:
I could either have an unlocked bootloader on a network with terrible service or a locked boot loader on a fantastic network. I choose the latter. Got lucky we got root but I wouldn't lose sleep over it. I would have gotten the nexus 6 if I was still that into Roms. Root will keep me very happy.
Sent from my SM-G920V using Tapatalk 2
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Click to collapse
Best network is very subjective to the area/region your in the most. In southwestern Ohio it is defiantly NOT the best network.
But I agree with OP on we should be allowed to unlock bootloader.
bkeaver said:
Best network is very subjective to the area/region your in the most. In southwestern Ohio it is defiantly NOT the best network.
But I agree with OP on we should be allowed to unlock bootloader.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
THANK YOU!!! It's like seriously we just want to use CWM or TWRP on OUR PHONES WE PAID FOR it is just ridiculous how they expect us to pay all this money for a phone that we own that we can't even modify!
Unfortunately all the b**ching and complaining isn't going to change that anytime soon I'm afraid
While I hate restrictions and censorship and over-protectiveness, I realize big red will only change when the market demands it. Unfortunately, we're too small a percentage of said market for the other players to even speak about bootloaders and root access, much less convince Verizon that they need to change. All Verizon cares about is the bottom line $$$, and apparently locking down everything is more profitable than attracting xda members to their network. As if they need the money, lol. I live in an area where there is only one choice, so I take what I can get.
I agree, the poll question is totally like asking a bunch of dairy-tolerant children if they want ice cream. I'd rather see something like "if you could pay more and waive any software support for a mobile device that has an unlocked bootloader, would you and how much more would you be willing to pay?" I suppose that question was sort of answered with the Google Edition devices (answer: $450 was too much for most) and sort of with the Nexus devices. I would pay at least $100 personally for an open bootloader, and probably waive the warranty completely. How could this not make Verizon money. Oh and my problem with the Nexus devices was the network exclusivity and then the Nexus 6 just being too big.
The real problem is there is no good developer program with Verizon or Samsung. If you buy a dev edition phone you are stuck with the OS that comes on it and Samsung's dev program is terrible. Verizon needs to create a good dev program with unlocked and not supported phones but give access to OTA updates. It's that simple...
MOS95B said:
Verizon made a marketing choice between selling supportability and network costs (no root means all phones allegedly have the some OS and basic settings, network has been discussed) or the cost of hiring people for support that can do more than read a script and follow a flow chart, which is what would be needed if they allowed for rooting. Also, think of the variety of phones. If they sold one brand of phone, and maybe only 2 or 3 of that brands models, supportability would not be as much of an issue.
Do I like being locked out from under the hood of my phone? No, of course not. Why else would I be on this site??
Do I understand their reasoning? Yes! Good technicians are not cheap. The person you call for tech help probably starts at under $12 an hour, and *might* have an A+ certification.
I'd rather have good cell service at a relatively reasonable rate and a variety of smartphones to choose from than pay how ever much extra it would cost to hire actual technicians to troubleshoot the myriad of issues opening the bootlocker would cost. Even with the "If you brek in, you don;t get support" type wanings, they would still have to pay hundreds iof not thousands of manhours for all the schmucks that would go in, unlock their phones, throw on custom ROM, or just start deleting files, and still call Verizon Support to fix it.
Source of my opinion - I have worked tech support for years. No amount of warnings, labels, etc will prevent customers for demanding you fix their stupidity, even when they admit that is the problem.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
It has nothing to do with hiring technicians to fix rooted phones...that is such a small small percentage of actual sales and technical errors. It is purely to provide maximum security for Exchange services for commercial and military contracts. AT&T and Verizon Samsung phones were rated the most secure phones on the market. And boom in came the dollars and contracts.
Any technician can drop the phone on their jig and push go for an Odin reset and restore to factory stock.
You all are taking this personal and it is not..blocking root or blocking kernel flashing (AOSP) was a side effect, not the intention of making it secure.
There are a lot of things that you choose to spend a lot of money on but cannot do what you want with. Here is the analogy, you buy Verizon because of the network...you spend $200,000 on a house in a good neighborhood. You cannot park your boat in your own driveway..why? Because the Home Owners Association for that nice neighborhood says you can't. You made your choice when you purchased this device knowing it was locked down as that has been the history of Verizon and AT&T for the past few devices.
bkeaver said:
Best network is very subjective to the area/region your in the most. In southwestern Ohio it is defiantly NOT the best network.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Then why did you choose Verizon?
---------- Post added at 10:07 AM ---------- Previous post was at 10:07 AM ----------
KennyG123 said:
It has nothing to do with hiring technicians to fix rooted phones...that is such a small small percentage of actual sales and technical errors. It is purely to provide maximum security for Exchange services for commercial and military contracts. AT&T and Verizon Samsung phones were rated the most secure phones on the market. And boom in came the dollars and contracts.
Any technician can drop the phone on their jig and push go for an Odin reset and restore to factory stock.
You all are taking this personal and it is not..blocking root or blocking kernel flashing (AOSP) was a side effect, not the intention of making it secure.
There are a lot of things that you choose to spend a lot of money on but cannot do what you want with. Here is the analogy, you buy Verizon because of the network...you spend $200,000 on a house in a good neighborhood. You cannot park your boat in your own driveway..why? Because the Home Owners Association for that nice neighborhood says you can't. You made your choice when you purchased this device knowing it was locked down as that has been the history of Verizon and AT&T for the past few devices.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
This.
Squintz said:
Then why did you choose Verizon?
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Click to collapse
To be honest I was all set to go back to att from tmobile but att pissed me off and I had never been on verizon so I went with them because of all the rave reviews about better network. Now we're kind of stuck for the time being.
This poll is stupid. Of course they have the right. They don't have to sell you the phone on their network. They're also not forcing you to stay, you could easily leave. Wonders of capitalism.
Disclaimer: Not saying I agree with it, but they certainly have the right.
KennyG123 said:
It has nothing to do with hiring technicians to fix rooted phones...that is such a small small percentage of actual sales and technical errors. It is purely to provide maximum security for Exchange services for commercial and military contracts. AT&T and Verizon Samsung phones were rated the most secure phones on the market. And boom in came the dollars and contracts.
Any technician can drop the phone on their jig and push go for an Odin reset and restore to factory stock.
You all are taking this personal and it is not..blocking root or blocking kernel flashing (AOSP) was a side effect, not the intention of making it secure.
There are a lot of things that you choose to spend a lot of money on but cannot do what you want with. Here is the analogy, you buy Verizon because of the network...you spend $200,000 on a house in a good neighborhood. You cannot park your boat in your own driveway..why? Because the Home Owners Association for that nice neighborhood says you can't. You made your choice when you purchased this device knowing it was locked down as that has been the history of Verizon and AT&T for the past few devices.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Excellent analogy! In that same mindset though, Cox cable didn't paste a giant tramp stamp on my garage door because there the internet provider of my home. Just sayin ?
no for real guess i have no idea how to do any of this but id like to learn. i have a couple phones to practice on but the **** aint finna do nothing if i have no idea how it all actually works and how i can apply it, again im new i dont know what to do send help
What's the issue with the couple of phones mentioned? Please clearly describe them, post screenshots if possible.
well this samsung a20 , or if we wanna get specific the SM-A205U, is locked and i had bought it via third party and they wont get back into contact with me so i can unlock it. also the other two are carrier locked but if i can just understand exactly what and how i can even use the information givin to me oin this app i can figure it out for sure.
So you want to Carrier or SIM-unlock a bunch of phones. My recommendation: Contact the affected carriers to get helped in doing so.
Negative ghost rider the A205U is completely locked out and I can't do anything with it at all because I bought it via third party on FB market place and I can't get back into contact with them, also the carrier will not unlock the other two
in all actuality tho if i could just be tought to understand the basics of using linux ill be good if you feel comfortable doing that or anyone for the fact of that matter