well... if you have an iPhone in Russia, this may be interesting, in other 
words, DON'T GET the updates from iTunes.  ah yes, I remember when i thought 
the iPod was a good idea and an iTunes update just fried it.  anyhoo:

But the Web was filled Friday with complaints from people who had installed the 
latest iPhone software update, only to see all the fun little programs they had 
been adding to their iPhones disappear   or, still worse, see their phones 
freeze up entirely. 
Should they have known better?
Since Monday, Apple officials have been warning iPhone owners that using 
unlocking software could cause the phone to become "permanently inoperable when 
a future Apple-supplied iPhone software update is installed." But in many cases 
those warnings went unheeded.
People who had unlocked their phones to use them with another carrier ran the 
greatest risk of, in techie terms, having them "bricked"   rendered about as 
useful as a brick. Most of those who committed the lesser transgression of 
installing programs not authorized by Apple simply had those programs wiped 
out. 
People have created dozens of programs for the iPhone, ranging from the useless 
but entertaining (a virtual popcorn popper) to the decidedly practical (a 
screen-shot capture program).
But for anyone who upgrades the iPhone's system software, a routine process 
that adds Apple's latest fixes and improvements, those programs can no longer 
be used. The update has made the iPhone "almost impervious to any third-party 
hacks," said Erica Sadun, a technical writer in Denver who has created more 
than a dozen programs for the iPhone, including the screen-shot program and a 
popular voice recorder.
Jennifer Bowcock, an Apple spokeswoman, said that when people went to update 
their software with their computer through iTunes, a warning appeared on the 
computer screen, making it clear that any unauthorized modifications to the 
iPhone software violated the agreement that people entered into when they 
bought the phone. "The inability to use your phone after making unauthorized 
modifications isn't covered under the iPhone warranty" Ms. Bowcock said.
There were reports online that employees at Apple stores were reviving or 
replacing some dead iPhones. But Ms. Bowcock did not offer much hope to iPhone 
owners with problems: "If the damage was due to use of an unauthorized software 
application, voiding their warranty, they should purchase a new iPhone."
Steven P. Jobs, Apple's chief executive, has said the company wanted to 
maintain control over the iPhone's functions to protect carrier networks and to 
make sure the phone was not damaged.
Ms. Sadun said the community of people who write unsanctioned software for the 
phone knew the update was coming. 
"We had about two weeks' notice," she said. Yet Ms. Sadun and others said they 
were surprised by the extremes to which Apple went to shut them down. "We tried 
to think well of Apple," she said. "Denial is a very strong part of the human 
spirit."
Until Friday morning, Ms. Sadun had a contract with the publishing firm 
Addison-Wesley to write a book about creating applications for the iPhone. 
After the news of Apple's crackdown spread, she received a note from her editor 
that suggested that they think of a different topic.
It was not unexpected that Apple would try to stop people from unlocking the 
phones, as this threatened to cause problems for AT&T, Apple's exclusive United 
States partner for the iPhone. 
"I don't blame them for fighting the unlocks," said Brian Lam, editor of 
Gizmodo, a blog devoted to gadgets. "They are trying to make money, as a 
business. I get that."
Still, he said, that disabling someone's phone, "instead of just relocking it 
and to wipe out the apps, it seems like Apple is going way too far; I'd call it 
uncharacteristically evil."
In some cases, the apparent punishment for installing unapproved software was 
harsh. Ross Good, a student at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 
had added several programs, including one for instant messaging. After the 
upgrade, the phone went into a semifrozen state. 
When Mr. Good called Apple, the reception was cool. "They said I put 
third-party software on my phone, and so it was my fault no matter what." 
Joel Robison, a systems network engineer near Seattle, said his phone stopped 
working immediately after he installed the upgrade. He said that when he took 
it to an Apple store, he was accused of having unlocked the phone. But he said 
that with the exception of one aborted attempt to install a piece of outside 
software, he had made no modifications to the phone.
"Their accusation was very damaging to my opinion of Apple's service," Mr. 
Robison said.
J. Noah Funderburg, an assistant dean at the University of Alabama School of 
Law in Tuscaloosa and a longtime Mac user, had little sympathy for iPhone 
hot-rodders. 
"Anyone who hacks must know that they are taking certain risks," Mr. Funderburg 
said. "If they aren't willing to assume the risks upfront   like a brick iPhone 
  then maybe they should not hack the device. 
"We have a free marketplace," he said. "Buy a product, including using it on 
the terms accompanying the purchase, or don't buy it. And learn to live with 
not always getting everything you want."
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