The New Yorker has published an in depth profile of George Hotz, Sony, and the Anonymous Hacker Wars.
In the summer of 2007, Apple released the iPhone, in an exclusive partnership with A.T. & T. George Hotz, a seventeen-year-old from Glen Rock, New Jersey, was a T-Mobile subscriber. He wanted an iPhone, but he also wanted to make calls using his existing network, so he decided to hack the phone. Every hack poses the same basic challenge: how to make something function in a way for which it wasn't designed. In one respect, hacking is an act of hypnosis. As Hotz describes it, the secret is to figure out how to speak to the device, then persuade it to obey your wishes. After weeks of research with other hackers online, Hotz realized that, if he could make a chip inside the phone think it had been erased, it was "like talking to a baby, and it's really easy to persuade a baby."
He used a Phillips-head eyeglass screwdriver to undo the two screws in the back of the phone. Then he slid a guitar pick around the tiny groove, and twisted free the shell with a snap. Eventually, he found his target: a square sliver of black plastic called a baseband processor, the chip that limited the carriers with which it could work. To get the baseband to listen to him, he had to override the commands it was getting from another part of the phone. He soldered a wire to the chip, held some voltage on it, and scrambled its code. The iPhone was now at his command. On his PC, he wrote a program that enabled the iPhone to work on any wireless carrier.
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Comments (3)
Comments are closed for this article.
0
Luis David - May 1, 2012 at 2:08am
Anonymous es una legión libre solo planea el internet libre
Somos anonymous
No olvidamos
Esperanos
El internet es libre.....
0
The iTerminator - April 30, 2012 at 5:52pm
..unless you just steal the water from your neighbor that lives a few steps away. Welcome to piracy. :)
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Crazyuknow - April 30, 2012 at 5:38pm
there won't be a need for piracy if the prices of software and games would drop. but it's not happening because our economy doesn't allow it. If I have to go from point A to point B it's going to cost. Even if I was to walk I would need water. Even if I get it from the sink I'am still paying the city for water.