Hold the Phone: Assessing the Rights of Wireless Handset Owners and Carriers
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.5195/lawreview.2008.97Abstract
Most subscribers in the United States acquire a subsidized handset when they activate or renew wireless telephone service. In exchange for purchasing a handset below cost, these customers must commit to a two-year service term with substantial financial penalties for early termination, and they must accept carrier-imposed limitations on the use of their handsets. Wireless carriers typically lock subscriber access to one carrier and lock out or thwart unaffiliated providers from providing content, software, and applications to these handsets. Limitations on the use of wireless handsets juxtaposes with the Carterfone policy established by the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) forty years ago, which requires all telephone companies to allow subscribers to attach any technically compatible device. Consumers take for granted the right to attach any device to a network that is “privately beneficial without being publicly detrimental.” Only recently have some wireless subscribers come to understand the costs of not having complete freedom to use their handsets. Technically sophisticated users have resorted to “selfhelp” strategies to override carrier locks at the risk of permanently disabling (“bricking”) the handset.Downloads
Published
2008-04-26
How to Cite
Frieden, Rob. 2008. “Hold the Phone: Assessing the Rights of Wireless Handset Owners and Carriers”. University of Pittsburgh Law Review 69 (4). https://doi.org/10.5195/lawreview.2008.97.
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