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Wikipedia

SIM lock

A SIM lock, simlock, network lock, carrier lock or (master) subsidy lock is a technical restriction built into GSM and CDMA[1] mobile phones by mobile phone manufacturers for use by service providers to restrict the use of these phones to specific countries and/or networks. This is in contrast to a phone (retrospectively called SIM-free or unlocked) that does not impose any SIM restrictions.

Generally phones can be locked to accept only SIM cards with certain International Mobile Subscriber Identities (IMSIs); IMSIs may be restricted by:

  • Mobile country code (MCC; e.g., will only work with SIM issued in one country)
  • Mobile network code (MNC; e.g., AT&T Mobility, T-Mobile, Vodafone, Bell Mobility etc.)
  • Mobile subscriber identification number (MSIN; i.e., only one SIM can be used with the phone)

Additionally, some phones, especially Nokia phones, are locked by group IDs (GIDs), restricting them to a single Mobile virtual network operator (MVNO) of a certain operator.

Most mobile phones can be unlocked to work with any GSM network provider, but the phone may still display the original branding and may not support features of the new carrier. Besides the locking, phones may also have firmware installed on them which is specific to the network provider. For example, a Vodafone or Telstra branded phone in Australia will display the relevant logo and may only support features provided by that network (e.g. Vodafone Live!). This firmware is installed by the service provider and is separate from the locking mechanism. Most phones can be unbranded by reflashing a different firmware version, a procedure recommended for advanced users only. The reason many network providers SIM lock their phones is that they offer phones at a discount to customers in exchange for a contract to pay for the use of the network for a specified time period, usually between one and three years. This business model allows the company to recoup the cost of the phone over the life of the contract. Such discounts are worth up to several hundred US dollars. If the phones were not locked, users might sign a contract with one company, get the discounted phone, then stop paying the monthly bill (thus breaking the contract) and start using the phone on another network or even sell the phone for a profit.[2] SIM locking curbs this by prohibiting change of network (using a new SIM).

In some countries, SIM locking is very common if subsidized phones are sold with prepaid contracts. It is important to note, however, that the technology associated with the phone must be compatible with the technology being used by the network carrier. A GSM cell phone will only work with a GSM carrier and will not work on a CDMA network provider. Likewise, a CDMA cell phone will only work with a CDMA carrier and will not work on a GSM network provider.[3][4] Note that newer (2013+) high end mobile phones are capable of supporting both CDMA and GSM technologies, allowing customers to use their mobile devices on any network. Examples of these mobile devices are the Apple iPhone 5c, 6 and newer, Motorola's G4, G5, X Pure, Samsung's Galaxy S6, S7, S8 smart phones, mostly phones based on a Qualcomm Snapdragon chipset or radio.

In some jurisdictions, such as Canada,[5] Chile,[6] China, Israel,[7] and Singapore,[8] it is illegal for providers to sell SIM locked devices. In other countries, carriers may not be required to unlock devices or may require the consumer to pay a fee for unlocking.

Unlocking the phone, however, is almost universally legal.[9] Additionally, it is often legal for carriers to force SIM locks for certain amounts of time, varying by region.

Unlocking technology edit

A handset can be unlocked by entering a code provided by the network operator. Alternative mechanisms include software running on the handset or a computer attached to the handset, hardware devices that connect to the handset or over-the-air by the carrier. Usually the unlock process is permanent. The code required to remove all locks from a phone is referred to as the master code, network code key, or multilock code. If the phone is network locked it will typically display one of the following messages: SIM network PIN blocked, Enter lock PIN.

There can also be multiple levels of locks placed on the phone by networks, which block the use of other networks' SIM cards. These are usually referred to as "Network Control Key" (NCK) and "Service Provider Control Key" (SPCK), additionally, a Regional lock exists which is specific to Europe and it is called "Region Control Key" (RGCK).

These locks can be removed using the corresponding unlock codes, which are unique to each phone depending on its IMEI.[10]

Typically, a locked handset will display a message if a restricted SIM is used, requesting the unlock code. On recent phone models running Android software, the phone will display a message saying “SIM network unlock PIN” or “Enter Network Lock Control Key” if network locked. Windows phones will display the message, “This SIM card can only be used on specific networks. Contact your customer service center for the unlock code”. Other handsets may display different messages such as "Enter special code" or "Enter unlocking code," or in some cases the handset will simply display a message stating that it is locked. Once a valid code is entered, the handset will display "Network unlocked” or “Network unlock successful”.

The unlock code is verified by the handset and is generated by the manufacturer, typically by an algorithm such as a one way hash or trapdoor function. Sometimes big telecom providers change the original factory unlock codes as an extra layer of security against unlocking services. For various big brands such as Samsung and Motorola there is no algorithm but just a random code generator where the unlock codes are programmed in the phone itself and then saved in a big database managed by the manufacturer. For the other brands where the unlock codes are still based on algorithms those are based on the IMEI number and the MCC code and have been reverse-engineered, stolen or leaked. Some handsets can be unlocked using software that generates an unlock code from an IMEI number and country and operator details using the algorithm specific to the handset. Other manufacturers have taken a more cautious approach, and embed a random number in the handset's firmware that is retained by the manufacturer and the network on whose behalf the lock was applied. These handsets can still be unlocked by online services that have access to either inside people with the manufacturer or with the telecom networks, or they need to be connected to the computer with a cable where specific software will bypass the security and SIM-unlock the phone. Sometimes this is done by advanced calculations to bypass the security the official way and other times using exploits or overwriting parts of the firmware where the lock status is kept, and often even recover a phone that is bricked or completely damaged in the software sense.

Most handsets have security measures built into their firmware that protects them from repeated attempts to guess the unlock code. After entering more than a certain number of incorrect codes the phone becomes frozen. This is a state where the phone will display a security message that the phone needs a service. Older phones could no longer be used at all at this point, however modern smartphones often keep working with the original SIM but require extra work to then unlock them correctly. In extreme situations physical access to internal hardware via in-circuit debugging may be utilised (for example, via JTAG headers on a circuit board). Such access may be required to modify initialization software used for booting.

Hardlocked phones edit

A hardlocked phone is one in which a telecom provider has modified the firmware on the phone to make it impossible to manually enter the unlock codes in any way. The only solution to SIM-unlock such a phone is to change the firmware to a firmware which has not been modified by any telecom provider, a so-called "unbranded firmware".

Economics edit

Handset manufacturers have economic incentives both to strengthen SIM lock security (which placates network providers and enables exclusivity deals) and to weaken it (broadening a handset's appeal to customers who are not interested in the service provider that offers it). Also, making it too difficult to unlock a handset might make it less appealing to network service providers who have a legal obligation to provide unlock codes for certain handsets or in certain countries.

In some cases, a SIM-locked handset is sold at a substantially lower price than an unlocked one, because the service provider expects income through its service. SIM locks are employed on cheaper (pay-as-you-go) handsets, while discounts on more expensive handsets require a subscription that provides guaranteed income. Unlocked handsets have a higher market value, even more so if they are debranded. Debranding involves reflashing or replacing the firmware to remove the operator logo or any limitations or customizations that have been imposed on the handset by the operator, and is usually accomplished with software designed for a particular handset model, however, most smart-phones can be debranded and unlocked solely with the use of special software.

The main reason to unlock a handset is to be able to use it with a different SIM card. Consumers may wish to continue using their previous provider with a new handset or when traveling abroad they may wish to connect to a foreign network with a prepaid subscription.

Nevertheless, the fundamental principle of GSM and its successors, is open interfaces which encourage competition among multiple vendors. This is the reason a mobile phone is, in fact, a combination of a phone and the subscriber identity module (SIM). Locking the phone to a network is not much different from having the SIM built into the mobile phone. Network operators in many industrialized countries are not bound by law to give the phone unlocking code to subscribers even after the expiry of the contract period.

Box breaking edit

A practice known as box breaking is common[11] in the United Kingdom and other markets. This involves purchasing subsidized handsets (usually pay-as-you-go) from retail stores, unlocking the phones, and then selling them (often abroad) for a higher price than the subsidised retail price. The SIM card that came with the handset is then either thrown away, sold, or used elsewhere. This practice is legal in the UK and provides a de facto limit to the extent to which networks are willing to subsidize pay-as-you-go handsets. While the act of box breaking is legal, some businesses are also engaging in illegal activities such as exporting the box-broken phones to other countries, to sell as grey market goods without paying import duties (known as Carousel Fraud) or substituting counterfeit batteries and chargers.[12][13]

Unlocking services edit

Some companies offer an online unlocking service. This service requires that individuals who wish to unlock a handset provide their IMEI number and sometimes also country and operator details to the company, either via email or a website. The company will then provide the unlock code for the handset. For some brands such as Nokia and Samsung various services also offer special remote-unlocking software with instructions, where a cable is needed to remove the SIM lock at home. Such companies may email the unlocking code or software which will remotely unlock the device. Some companies also offer unlocking services that require sending the handset's IMEI number. Other companies sell unlocking hardware, including devices which fit between the SIM card and the phone to spoof the original network identifier during registration and devices to read and edit the handset's firmware. The pricing for unlocking a device will vary depending on the network it is locked to and the handset model itself, as each unlock code is unique to each individual handset.

Unlock code generators edit

There are online services that will provide an IMEI unlocking service for DCT4 and DCT3 Nokia mobile phones.[citation needed] This method of unlock requires the user to know which carrier the mobile phone is locked to, and also needs to provide an IMEI. Generally, older model Nokia unlock codes are free and instantly retrievable by these services. The unlock codes retrieved must be entered into the mobile phone using the keypad.

For DCT4 and DCT3 Nokia, unlock codes consist of a "#" key, followed by "pw+", 10 (DCT3) or 15 (DCT4) digits, "+", and another number ranging from 1-7, and finally ends with a "#". Depending on the carrier which the phone is locked to, only some codes will work with the mobile phone. Most phones respond to the unlock codes ending in +1# or +7#, however some phones are configured to allow only one of the seven codes to work. The following is an example of a DCT4/DCT3 unlock code:

# pw+931882753035021+7# 

DCT4 and DCT3 Nokia will only allow a maximum of five unlock attempts using the unlock code method. After five incorrect codes have been inputted, the phone will not allow the user to try any more codes (even if it is correct) and will require the owner to try other unlock methods.

Laws and practices edit

Many countries listed below have some form of SIM-locking laws specifying the period of SIM locking and the cost of obtaining unlocking codes.

Andorra edit

In Andorra, the state-owned communications mobile company Mobiland does not sell SIM-locked phones. As there is no competition, consumers usually buy standard mobile phones that are not locked to any specific carrier.[citation needed]

Austria edit

In Austria, unlocking is allowed at any time by the owner of the device. A lawsuit was decided in favor of a mobile operator who encouraged the unlocking of phones by providing links to free/cheap unlocking services.[14]

T-Mobile Austria charges 150 euros to unlock the iPhone for prepaid subscribers and in contract subscribers. For subscribers who have finished their 2-year iPhone contract, T-Mobile Austria charges 50 euros to unlock the iPhone.[15]

Australia edit

In Australia, carriers can choose whether to SIM/Network Lock handsets or not, however in practice, is rarely performed except in limited cases. Almost all handsets available on the Australian market have no such restriction.[citation needed]

One law professor, Dale Clapperton, gave a talk stating that bundling iPhone and mobile phone service could be violating the Trade Practices Act.[16] However, no other legal professional or academic has come out in support of this viewpoint.[17] This also doesn't address SIM locking per se, only as applied to subsidised iPhone purchases, and persistence of the lock beyond the contractual period.[citation needed]

Belgium edit

Until 2007, Belgium had laws prohibiting bundling, but they were challenged as violating European Directive 2005/29/EC The Unfair Commercial Practices Directive. On April 23, 2009, the European Court of Justice ruled against Belgium and struck down Belgium's anti-bundling law.[18] The Belgian government was given until May 2009 to change the law, failing which the European Commission would commence proceedings against Belgium.[citation needed] This leaves Canada, China, Singapore, and Israel as the only countries in the world that forbid SIM locking and contract/phone bundling outright.[19][5] Chile initiated a ban as of January 1, 2012.

Brazil edit

In Brazil, SIM locks are not prohibited. However, the mobile carrier must inform the consumer of the existence of a SIM lock. Anatel, Brazil's telecom regulator, requires the carrier to unlock free of charge the mobile phone if required by the user. After this regulation most telecom operators started voluntarily unlocking the devices as soon as it was purchased so one could leave the store with an unlocked phone.[20]

Canada edit

Under revisions to the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission (CRTC) Wireless Code of Conduct effective 1 December 2017, all new devices must be sold unlocked, and carriers must offer to unlock phones purchased prior to this date free of charge.[5] Fees may be required if the customer was not under a contract or prepaid plan with the carrier.[21]

After the implementation of this rule, Bell Canada initially refused to offer unlocks for users who were not customers of the carrier (in contrast to Rogers and Telus), but reversed course in February 2018 due to public backlash.[22][23] In a filing to the CRTC in August 2018, Bell also stated that it had begun to reimplement SIM locks on unsold phones as an anti-theft and safety measure (the phones are unlocked during the activation process when sold to a customer), citing increases in theft from store stocks since the implementation of the prohibition.[24]

Under the original version of the Wireless Code implemented 2013, carriers were required to offer unlocks no later than 90 calendar days from the start of a contract for subsidized devices, or immediately upon purchase of an unsubsidized device. The Code, however, did not expressly prohibit carriers from charging an unlock fee.[5][25]

Prior to the introduction of the Wireless Code, New Democratic Party MP Bruce Hyer first attempted to mandate SIM unlocking at the end of cell phone contracts when he introduced a private member's bill entitled the Cell Phone Freedom Act in 2010. The act would not have banned SIM locking but would have required wireless carriers to unlock phones at no charge at the end of a cell phone contract. The bill was introduced in two sessions of parliament but failed to pass either time.[citation needed]

China edit

Under a regulation enacted by the Ministry of Industry and Information Technology, locking phones to a specific carrier is prohibited if other carriers are also using the same type of network technology. Therefore, all phones approved to be sold in China are never locked to begin with regardless of whether the consumer purchased the phone under a contract or not. However, since all three Chinese carriers each uses a different network technology after the adoption of 3G, carriers started to ask phone manufacturers to disable support for network technologies not used by such carrier even if the phone has been originally designed to be capable of supporting those network technologies. Such a move does not result in violation of the ban on phone locking. For example, an iPhone 6 was designed to be capable of supporting LTE FDD, LTE TD, CDMA, and WCDMA technologies but China Mobile reached a deal with Apple to create a special model for China Mobile in addition to the off-contract retail model sold by Apple and third party vendors with the capability to support LTE FDD, CDMA, WCDMA, which are the technologies not used by China Mobile, disabled, effectively making such special contract model incompatible with the 3G and 4G networks of other carriers even though such phones are never locked.[citation needed]

Colombia edit

Starting October 1, 2011, all the mobile telephone services providers, must sell to all users unlocked devices and provide free of charge support to unlock previously sold devices. This regulation was ordered to enable mobile number portability and to facilitate the reduction on costs ordered simultaneously.[26]

Chile edit

Since Chile 1 January 2012, newly sold phones must be unlocked. Previously bought locked phones had to be unlocked for free. The regulation was put in place in order to implement mobile number portability.[6] However, the law only requires phones to be usable with all Chilean providers. It does not cover international unlocking for use outside Chile, so users may have to pay for the unlocking service.[citation needed]

A new related issue is present since 23 September 2017, every IMEI have to be registered so the phone works in the country. For local carriers, they do the process, but to use a phone from outside the country, each user has to register it. IMEI Registration.[27]

Croatia edit

In Croatia, for devices bought on contract, the mobile operator must provide the unlock code on the user's request free of charge. Such request can be made immediately after buying the phone, and the operator has a 15-day period to fulfill the request. For devices bought on a prepaid plan, the user has to wait at least 12 months before submitting such request.[28]

Denmark edit

The carrier can choose to bind contracts up to 6 months from the contract's start. Many of the carriers choose not to lock the phones. Only Hi3G ("3") lock their phones, but can only do so for six months.[29] If the phone needs to be unlocked within the first six months, the carrier can charge DKK 500 (~ €67)[29] for the unlock. After six months, the carrier is obliged by law to unlock the phone free of charge. But the consumer needs to contact the original supplier, and provide the IMEI and original phone number for which the phone was sold.[citation needed]

Ecuador edit

Although there is no specific law preventing SIM locking, as of December 2009 Ecuador's two biggest carriers, Porta and Movistar, unlock phones previously sold by them, without charge.[30]

European Union edit

Countries in the European Union (EU) each have their own legislation on SIM locking, but must comply with the EU Unfair Commercial Practices Directive (Directive 2005/29/EC of 2005). As noted above, this directive has been successfully applied in Belgium to overturn that country's previous ban on bundling phones with contracts. However, carriers in many countries in the EU do not necessarily associate a phone's SIM lock status to the customer's tie-in contract status.

Finland edit

In Finland, carriers are not allowed to sell SIM-locked GSM phones, nor are they allowed to offer tie-in sales on GSM equipment. Under Finnish law, a tie-in sale is defined as selling the equipment for a discounted price contingent on the consumer also acquiring a new service contract from the seller. Under the terms of a provisional exception, valid from 2006 until 2009, tie-in sales were permitted with 3G handsets, and 3G equipment which is purchased under such tie-in sales may be SIM-locked. The SIM lock must be removed free of charge at the conclusion of the tie-in contract, within a maximum duration of 2 years.[31] In 2008, the Finnish government was preparing to extend the exception, and at the same time, was considering reducing the duration of tie-in contracts to one year.[32]

France edit

In France, SIM locks are not prohibited. However, the mobile operator must inform the consumer of the existence of a SIM lock, and the subscriber has the right to request that the lock be removed at any time. No later than three months after the subscription of the contract, the mobile operator must "systematically and free of charge" provide the subscriber with a procedure to deactivate the SIM lock. Proposal to shorten the time that operators may charge a fee for removing the SIM lock prior from six-month to the three-month deadline.[33]

Germany edit

In Germany, there does not appear to be any effective law regulating SIM locking.[original research?] For example, the iPhone was initially offered for sale in Germany exclusively through T-Mobile, and it was locked to T-Mobile's network. They began to provide unlocking codes for that phone after they were sued by Vodafone and a temporary injunction was issued requiring T-Mobile to do so. Vodafone's injunction was later overturned, and the iPhone is again available exclusively locked to T-Mobile.[34] While T-Mobile Germany told the court that they would unlock the iPhone after the contract, they were doing it voluntarily.[citation needed]

While SIM locking is legal, a court ruled in 2012 that providers must clearly inform potential customers about the SIM lock.[35]

As of 2015, usually only prepaid mobile phones are sold with a SIM lock. Phones sold with a contract stipulating monthly payments are not typically locked (as the monthly payments are due no matter what network the phone is used on). Also, most providers will unlock the phone on demand. Usually a fee is charged during the first two years after purchase; afterwards the unlocking is free. As of 2022, new phones are rarely distributed with a SIM lock;[36] old phones however may still be locked.

Honduras edit

In Honduras, there is a general law applicable to all consumer relations engaged in the national territory and provided by natural or legal persons, public or private. This law is called "Ley de Proteccion al Consumidor"[37] or "Consumer Protection Act of Honduras", approved by Legislative Decree No.24-2008, and it regulates the activities of any goods and services providers stating the principles that they must follow in order to operate in this country.

Article 20 of this law states the prohibitions that sellers are obliged to abide when selling a good or providing a service to people. Paragraph 7 of this article states that it is prohibited to a provider to "place seals, adhesives, duct tapes or analogous mechanisms, which prevent the consumer to make free use of the product, except those mechanisms used by the manufacturer for warranty purposes".

Even though the existence of this law, local carriers continue to apply SIM restrictions to the phones they sell. For example, the iPhone is sold by Claro in Honduras and is SIM-locked,.[38] which suggests that this general consumer protection law does not prohibit SIM locking of cell phones[39]

Hong Kong edit

In Hong Kong, carriers are not allowed to SIM-lock a phone for the sole purpose of tying customers to their network. But Hong Kong carriers can SIM-lock a phone to protect the handset subsidy, to enforce mobile plan contracts or to protect from theft.[40] After the initial purchase subsidy has been recovered, or the full cost of the equipment has been paid up under a rental or installment agreement, the carrier must provide a detailed procedure for unlocking the equipment free of charge upon request.[citation needed]

India edit

SIM locking is not common in India. Initially, each state in India had a different mobile network operator and roaming across states was prohibitive. It was cheaper to change the SIM card than pay high roaming charges. The number of inter-state travelers demanded unlocked phones. Usually, phones and SIM cards are sold separately. Mobile phone manufacturers sell phones directly to customers rather than through network operators. Dual SIM phones are quite common in use, with users choosing to make calls using a cheaper operator suitable for the particular call and time of the day from a Dual SIM phone without even switching it off. This along with other factors, encouraged competition among network operators and brought down the mobile phone call charges in from the initial 32 (US$0.75) in 1996 to 0.50 (US$0.005 approx.) in 2011. The rates still differ from one service provider to another and across different tariff schemes provided by the same operator. Telecom Regulatory Authority of India (TRAI) is the independent regulator of the telecommunications business in India,[41] established to check call rates and resolve all communication related issues and holds the upper hand in fixing call rates.

Israel edit

According to the Arrangements Law passed on December 29, 2010, Israeli carriers are banned from locking handsets sold by them, and are obligated to unlock any handset previously sold at no charge.[7]

Italy edit

Italy has SIM locking laws requiring that carriers must specify the amount of subsidies, and allow subscribers to obtain unlocking codes after nine months by paying half of the listed subsidies. After 18 months, the SIM lock must be removed.[42]

Japan edit

Japan's Ministry of Internal Affairs and Communications has legislated that all smartphones and tablets released after May 1, 2015, by NTT DoCoMo, au/Okinawa Cellular and SoftBank Mobile (the three major carriers in Japan) must be sold without a SIM lock upon request from customers and without any cost to the customer involved. Before that, from 2011 until 2015, only NTT DoCoMo and au/Okinawa Cellular would remove the SIM lock from phones with a SIM unlock function after the phone is kept or used at least six months after purchase.[43]

Monaco edit

In Monaco, the partially state-owned communications mobile company Monaco Telecom does not sell SIM-locked phones. As there is no competition, consumers usually buy standard mobile phones that are not locked to any specific carrier.

Netherlands edit

Dutch mobile carriers have an agreement[44] with the Netherlands' telecom regulator, OPTA, to establish a code of conduct[45] with respect to SIM locking — specifically, unlocking fees can be charged within the first 12 months and SIM lock cannot last longer than 12 months.[46]

In a 2002 letter to the Dutch Secretary of State of Economic Affairs, OPTA stated that the telecom regulator has decided to start working on the formalization of the voluntary code of conduct into legislation.[47] However, a 2006 report written by the Dutch Ministry of Economic Affairs,[48] stated that competition in the Dutch mobile market is sufficient and the formalization of the voluntary code of conduct into legislation is not needed. Thus there are no SIM locking laws in the Netherlands.[49]

New Zealand edit

Locking was planned in New Zealand before May 2008[50] when Vodafone New Zealand announced they would begin locking handsets. The company had planned to charge $50 to unlock them, but then relented. It is speculated that the intention to lock was prompted by Telecom New Zealand building their new mobile network based on UMTS technology, allowing handsets to change networks for the first time. Until that point in time, Telecom's network (the only other mobile network at that time) was based on CDMA technology, meaning that it was not possible to change networks. 2degrees were also building a mobile network based on UMTS at this time. After pressure from the Commerce Commission, Vodafone relented on its locking policy, and will unlock any locked phones for free once they have been owned for nine months. You can pay to have it unlocked prior to this.[51][52]

Following speculation of a new lower cost, MNVO of Telecom XT details were leaked regarding the Skinny Mobile Network, which would SIM lock handsets.

As of 2015, Vodafone, Spark, Skinny, and 2Degrees all charged a $30 unlock fee for phones owned for less than 9 months. As of 2020, Spark charges a $30 unlock fee for phones owned for less than 9 months, unless the customer is on a Pay Monthly 24 Month Plan. 2Degrees dropped its fees for unlocking phones.[53]

Norway edit

Phones sold with a subscription are usually SIM locked to Norwegian carriers. The fee varies depending on how long it has been since you purchased your mobile phone. After 12 months, you can enter the operator lock code yourself without paying for it.[citation needed]

Pakistan edit

Ufone has started SIM Locking with the release of its new smartphone named Smart U5 developed by Emitac Services, UAE. U5 comes SIM locked to Ufone only. No other SIM can be used on the U5.[citation needed]

Peru edit

According to OSIPTEL Peru's telecom regulator, article 23 of the Terms of use, mobile carriers can sell phones locked for a lower price for 12, 18 or 24-month contracts, but also must sell unlocked devices for the full price. The same article dictates the customer can request the unlock code for free after 12 months from the purchase date, no matter if the contract is still in place. The sole exception is if the customer cancels the contract before its end and pays the remaining cost, at which point the customer can request the device be unlocked at any time. OSIPTEL plans to reduce the time customers must wait to remove their SIM locks to 6 months.

Portugal edit

A 2006 study sponsored by the Portugal regulator, ANACOM, on handset subsidies and SIM locking concluded that there are no special regulatory concerns on offering subsidized SIM-locked equipment in exchange for signing a contract tying a customer to a particular network. Network providers are allowed to apply SIM locks as they see fit, and they may voluntarily remove them if they choose to do so. In the paper, the author stated that the average unlocking fee charged by Portuguese carriers is 90-100 euros.[54] A recently approved law[55] requires network operators to unlock a device free of charge if the respective contract has already expired (But they refuse to do so charging at least 10 euros). It also establishes limits to the fees that operators may charge to unlock a device while it is still under contract.

Romania edit

Romanian telecom regulator ANCOM signed a code of conduct with several Romanian carriers providing that as of September 1, 2009 mobile operators selling handsets locked within their own network have to inform clients whether the handset is locked and provide unlocking upon request. It is "self-regulation" by the carriers to prevent the regulator from actually imposing regulations on them. If the handset is not purchased together with other electronic communications services, the mobile telephony operator that sells it will bear the unlocking costs and will not bind the terminal unlocking by the purchase of other services or by the payment of other fees.[citation needed]

If the handset is purchased as part of a promotional package or at a preferential price and the customer requires the unlocking before the expiry of the minimum period provided in the contract for communications services concluded with the operator, the customer will have to pay both the unlocking fee and the penalty for the anticipated unlocking of the handset. The price charged to unlock handsets will not exceed the costs of this operation and operators are obliged to meet unlocking requests within 15 days.[56]

Russia edit

SIM locking is not common in Russia, but they have huge potentials to sell unlocked phones. Most mobile phones sold in Russia doesn't have extensive bundlings, customizations as well as the carrier-specific bloatware. Beeline-branded phones are always locked to their network operator.[citation needed]

Serbia edit

In telecommunication contracts it is frequent the practice to lock the use of a sim card of one operator with a phone acquired through the same mobile operator. Obstructing the unlocking of the phone may be illegal if the consumer is entitled to it.[citation needed]

Singapore edit

In 1997, Singapore's then-telecommunications regulator, Telecommunication Authority of Singapore (now Infocomm Media Authority of Singapore) enforced a legislation where telcos (Singtel, StarHub, M1, Circles.Life, MyRepublic, TPG Telecom and Zero1) are not allowed to SIM-lock devices, such as phones, tablets and smartwatches that are imported and sold in Singapore.[57][58] In August 1997, TAS warned at least one operator, M1, for selling SIM-locked phones.[59]

Spain edit

In 1998, the then-Spanish telecom regulator, Tribunal de Defensa de la Competencia (now Comisión Nacional de los Mercados y la Competencia), saw that Spanish mobile carriers already provided unlocking codes voluntarily for a fee within the first 12 months and for free after 12 months, so it decided not to establish any legal framework in Spain.[60] CMT has not revisited this decision since then, therefore there are no SIM-locking laws in Spain.

Sweden edit

In Sweden, carriers are required to unlock handsets after 12 months since purchase. This applies both to on-contract and pay as you go phones. All carriers will charge a fee of 300 SEK (approximately $45) or 350 SEK (approximately $50), depending on carrier, to unlock the handset. However, as of 2016, most carriers have stopped locking phones altogether.[citation needed]

Switzerland edit

SIM locking may be particularly common there. Swisscom began lifting SIM lock since July 2013. Sunrise prepaid mobile phones have a SIM lock for 2 years from purchase.[citation needed]

Thailand edit

Thailand is also another country that forbids outright SIM locking and as a result, no phones are sold in the market are subsidized by carriers. Up until recently mobile phone manufacturers have their own store fronts and mobile carriers are only the service providers.[citation needed]

Turkey edit

SIM locking is forbidden by the regulatory authority in Türkiye since 2013.[61][62] There are conflicting and varying reports about former practices of SIM locking by operators. A newspaper column from 1997 criticizes Telsim's SIM locking policy: "... you cannot quit Telsim until the phone becomes waste, the only way to quit Telsim is buying a new phone."[63] Turkcell's SIM locking policy has been subject to a lawsuit in 2001, resulting in Turkcell being fined.[64] BlackBerry phones sold by Turkcell and Vodafone were SIM locked, however, could be unlocked on request without any conditions.[65] Yet, the SIM locking practice was only confined to phones sold by operators and it is not clear if operators enforced SIM locking on the phones sold by them tightly or not and if the practice was widespread. Phones sold by other channels were strictly unlocked. Three major mobile network operators, Turkcell, Türk Telekom and Vodafone still offer phones with long term contracts, however these phones are sold unlocked.[citation needed]

United Kingdom edit

In the United Kingdom, mobile phone network providers are not obliged to provide unlocking, even after the end of the contract. Ofcom, UK's telecom regulator, allowed 3 UK to sell a mobile phone with the SIM card permanently superglued to the phone.[66] Most operators offer some form of unlocking service, depending on the state of the contract and the model of phone, but usually for a charge. The full Oftel 2002 SIM-lock position paper specifies that there is no SIM-locking law in the UK; the regulator wants only "consumer awareness". The examples within the position paper are just "examples" of current carrier practices for illustration purposes, but do not reflect any official Oftel regulation.[67] The main networks often agree to unlock handsets for a charge, either at the end of a contract or, for prepaid handsets, after several months. Some Blackberry handsets supplied by Vodafone (e.g., Storm)[68] are examples of a UK carrier not offering unlocking codes. As of April 2011 O2 will unlock any of their pay-monthly phones for free, even if they're still in contract, with the exception of handsets made exclusively for them, such as their Palm devices.[69]Carphone Warehouse, one of the largest UK phone retailers, offers unlocked phones with most PAYG deals.[citation needed] As of January 1, 2014, all phones sold by 3 UK are unlocked. Phones bought before this date will be unlocked for free.[70]

On 17 December 2019, Ofcom announced that it would explore a mandate banning SIM locking.[71] On 27 October 2020, The UK's mobile networks are to be forbidden from selling phones locked to their services from December 2021.[72]

United States edit

One of the two American GSM carriers, T-Mobile,[73] will unlock handsets for those with active account in good standing for at least 40 days and no unlock code request in the last 90 days. The other, AT&T Mobility, is required to do so upon request (with some exceptions and requirements) after ninety days of active service under the terms of a class action settlement.[74] Prior to the settlement, AT&T would[75] usually do so once one has concluded their contract, and in some other situations. AT&T had in the past stated that it would not unlock iPhones under any circumstances, regardless of the legality of doing so, even after customers are out of contract. However, AT&T has since announced that starting April 8, 2012, it will begin unlocking off-contract iPhones, provided that the customer's account is in good standing.[76] AT&T also has an unannounced policy of unlocking iPhones for United States service members who are deployed overseas—even if they are still under contract.[77]

Before carriers began voluntarily providing unlock codes for all phone models, in 2010 the Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) successfully convinced the United States Copyright Office to allow an exemption to the general prohibition on circumvention of copyright protection systems under the Digital Millennium Copyright Act of 1998 for unlocking of phones through user self-help (sometimes referred to as "hacking").[78] This exemption has become less important now that most carriers are voluntarily providing unlock codes.

According to a ruling effective October 28, 2012, it will be illegal to unlock phones purchased 90 days after this date or later without the carrier's permission.[79] In other words, users can already unlock phones they already own, and phones purchased before January 29, 2013, but phones purchased after this point can only be unlocked with the carrier's permission.

In March 2013, the Obama administration and the Federal Communications Commission said consumers should also be able to switch carriers and keep their actual phones.[80]

On August 1, 2014, President Obama signed into law the Unlocking Consumer Choice and Wireless Competition Act (S. 517; 113th Congress), a bill legalizing unlocking cellphones in the US.[81][82] The bill passed in the United States Senate on July 15, 2014, and in the United States House of Representatives on July 25, 2014.

Sprint agreed to allow domestic unlocking on all mobile devices launched after February 15, 2015.[83]

It is possible to buy unlocked phones in the U.S. Some online retailers sell phones that come unlocked from the manufacturer, that is, they were never locked in the first place.[citation needed]

See also edit

References edit

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lock, simlock, network, lock, carrier, lock, master, subsidy, lock, technical, restriction, built, into, cdma, mobile, phones, mobile, phone, manufacturers, service, providers, restrict, these, phones, specific, countries, networks, this, contrast, phone, retr. A SIM lock simlock network lock carrier lock or master subsidy lock is a technical restriction built into GSM and CDMA 1 mobile phones by mobile phone manufacturers for use by service providers to restrict the use of these phones to specific countries and or networks This is in contrast to a phone retrospectively called SIM free or unlocked that does not impose any SIM restrictions Generally phones can be locked to accept only SIM cards with certain International Mobile Subscriber Identities IMSIs IMSIs may be restricted by Mobile country code MCC e g will only work with SIM issued in one country Mobile network code MNC e g AT amp T Mobility T Mobile Vodafone Bell Mobility etc Mobile subscriber identification number MSIN i e only one SIM can be used with the phone Additionally some phones especially Nokia phones are locked by group IDs GIDs restricting them to a single Mobile virtual network operator MVNO of a certain operator Most mobile phones can be unlocked to work with any GSM network provider but the phone may still display the original branding and may not support features of the new carrier Besides the locking phones may also have firmware installed on them which is specific to the network provider For example a Vodafone or Telstra branded phone in Australia will display the relevant logo and may only support features provided by that network e g Vodafone Live This firmware is installed by the service provider and is separate from the locking mechanism Most phones can be unbranded by reflashing a different firmware version a procedure recommended for advanced users only The reason many network providers SIM lock their phones is that they offer phones at a discount to customers in exchange for a contract to pay for the use of the network for a specified time period usually between one and three years This business model allows the company to recoup the cost of the phone over the life of the contract Such discounts are worth up to several hundred US dollars If the phones were not locked users might sign a contract with one company get the discounted phone then stop paying the monthly bill thus breaking the contract and start using the phone on another network or even sell the phone for a profit 2 SIM locking curbs this by prohibiting change of network using a new SIM In some countries SIM locking is very common if subsidized phones are sold with prepaid contracts It is important to note however that the technology associated with the phone must be compatible with the technology being used by the network carrier A GSM cell phone will only work with a GSM carrier and will not work on a CDMA network provider Likewise a CDMA cell phone will only work with a CDMA carrier and will not work on a GSM network provider 3 4 Note that newer 2013 high end mobile phones are capable of supporting both CDMA and GSM technologies allowing customers to use their mobile devices on any network Examples of these mobile devices are the Apple iPhone 5c 6 and newer Motorola s G4 G5 X Pure Samsung s Galaxy S6 S7 S8 smart phones mostly phones based on a Qualcomm Snapdragon chipset or radio In some jurisdictions such as Canada 5 Chile 6 China Israel 7 and Singapore 8 it is illegal for providers to sell SIM locked devices In other countries carriers may not be required to unlock devices or may require the consumer to pay a fee for unlocking Unlocking the phone however is almost universally legal 9 Additionally it is often legal for carriers to force SIM locks for certain amounts of time varying by region Contents 1 Unlocking technology 1 1 Hardlocked phones 1 2 Economics 1 3 Box breaking 1 4 Unlocking services 1 4 1 Unlock code generators 2 Laws and practices 2 1 Andorra 2 2 Austria 2 3 Australia 2 4 Belgium 2 5 Brazil 2 6 Canada 2 7 China 2 8 Colombia 2 9 Chile 2 10 Croatia 2 11 Denmark 2 12 Ecuador 2 13 European Union 2 14 Finland 2 15 France 2 16 Germany 2 17 Honduras 2 18 Hong Kong 2 19 India 2 20 Israel 2 21 Italy 2 22 Japan 2 23 Monaco 2 24 Netherlands 2 25 New Zealand 2 26 Norway 2 27 Pakistan 2 28 Peru 2 29 Portugal 2 30 Romania 2 31 Russia 2 32 Serbia 2 33 Singapore 2 34 Spain 2 35 Sweden 2 36 Switzerland 2 37 Thailand 2 38 Turkey 2 39 United Kingdom 2 40 United States 3 See also 4 ReferencesUnlocking technology editA handset can be unlocked by entering a code provided by the network operator Alternative mechanisms include software running on the handset or a computer attached to the handset hardware devices that connect to the handset or over the air by the carrier Usually the unlock process is permanent The code required to remove all locks from a phone is referred to as the master code network code key or multilock code If the phone is network locked it will typically display one of the following messages SIM network PIN blocked Enter lock PIN There can also be multiple levels of locks placed on the phone by networks which block the use of other networks SIM cards These are usually referred to as Network Control Key NCK and Service Provider Control Key SPCK additionally a Regional lock exists which is specific to Europe and it is called Region Control Key RGCK These locks can be removed using the corresponding unlock codes which are unique to each phone depending on its IMEI 10 Typically a locked handset will display a message if a restricted SIM is used requesting the unlock code On recent phone models running Android software the phone will display a message saying SIM network unlock PIN or Enter Network Lock Control Key if network locked Windows phones will display the message This SIM card can only be used on specific networks Contact your customer service center for the unlock code Other handsets may display different messages such as Enter special code or Enter unlocking code or in some cases the handset will simply display a message stating that it is locked Once a valid code is entered the handset will display Network unlocked or Network unlock successful The unlock code is verified by the handset and is generated by the manufacturer typically by an algorithm such as a one way hash or trapdoor function Sometimes big telecom providers change the original factory unlock codes as an extra layer of security against unlocking services For various big brands such as Samsung and Motorola there is no algorithm but just a random code generator where the unlock codes are programmed in the phone itself and then saved in a big database managed by the manufacturer For the other brands where the unlock codes are still based on algorithms those are based on the IMEI number and the MCC code and have been reverse engineered stolen or leaked Some handsets can be unlocked using software that generates an unlock code from an IMEI number and country and operator details using the algorithm specific to the handset Other manufacturers have taken a more cautious approach and embed a random number in the handset s firmware that is retained by the manufacturer and the network on whose behalf the lock was applied These handsets can still be unlocked by online services that have access to either inside people with the manufacturer or with the telecom networks or they need to be connected to the computer with a cable where specific software will bypass the security and SIM unlock the phone Sometimes this is done by advanced calculations to bypass the security the official way and other times using exploits or overwriting parts of the firmware where the lock status is kept and often even recover a phone that is bricked or completely damaged in the software sense Most handsets have security measures built into their firmware that protects them from repeated attempts to guess the unlock code After entering more than a certain number of incorrect codes the phone becomes frozen This is a state where the phone will display a security message that the phone needs a service Older phones could no longer be used at all at this point however modern smartphones often keep working with the original SIM but require extra work to then unlock them correctly In extreme situations physical access to internal hardware via in circuit debugging may be utilised for example via JTAG headers on a circuit board Such access may be required to modify initialization software used for booting Hardlocked phones edit A hardlocked phone is one in which a telecom provider has modified the firmware on the phone to make it impossible to manually enter the unlock codes in any way The only solution to SIM unlock such a phone is to change the firmware to a firmware which has not been modified by any telecom provider a so called unbranded firmware Economics edit Handset manufacturers have economic incentives both to strengthen SIM lock security which placates network providers and enables exclusivity deals and to weaken it broadening a handset s appeal to customers who are not interested in the service provider that offers it Also making it too difficult to unlock a handset might make it less appealing to network service providers who have a legal obligation to provide unlock codes for certain handsets or in certain countries In some cases a SIM locked handset is sold at a substantially lower price than an unlocked one because the service provider expects income through its service SIM locks are employed on cheaper pay as you go handsets while discounts on more expensive handsets require a subscription that provides guaranteed income Unlocked handsets have a higher market value even more so if they are debranded Debranding involves reflashing or replacing the firmware to remove the operator logo or any limitations or customizations that have been imposed on the handset by the operator and is usually accomplished with software designed for a particular handset model however most smart phones can be debranded and unlocked solely with the use of special software The main reason to unlock a handset is to be able to use it with a different SIM card Consumers may wish to continue using their previous provider with a new handset or when traveling abroad they may wish to connect to a foreign network with a prepaid subscription Nevertheless the fundamental principle of GSM and its successors is open interfaces which encourage competition among multiple vendors This is the reason a mobile phone is in fact a combination of a phone and the subscriber identity module SIM Locking the phone to a network is not much different from having the SIM built into the mobile phone Network operators in many industrialized countries are not bound by law to give the phone unlocking code to subscribers even after the expiry of the contract period Box breaking edit Main article Box breaker A practice known as box breaking is common 11 in the United Kingdom and other markets This involves purchasing subsidized handsets usually pay as you go from retail stores unlocking the phones and then selling them often abroad for a higher price than the subsidised retail price The SIM card that came with the handset is then either thrown away sold or used elsewhere This practice is legal in the UK and provides a de facto limit to the extent to which networks are willing to subsidize pay as you go handsets While the act of box breaking is legal some businesses are also engaging in illegal activities such as exporting the box broken phones to other countries to sell as grey market goods without paying import duties known as Carousel Fraud or substituting counterfeit batteries and chargers 12 13 Unlocking services edit Some companies offer an online unlocking service This service requires that individuals who wish to unlock a handset provide their IMEI number and sometimes also country and operator details to the company either via email or a website The company will then provide the unlock code for the handset For some brands such as Nokia and Samsung various services also offer special remote unlocking software with instructions where a cable is needed to remove the SIM lock at home Such companies may email the unlocking code or software which will remotely unlock the device Some companies also offer unlocking services that require sending the handset s IMEI number Other companies sell unlocking hardware including devices which fit between the SIM card and the phone to spoof the original network identifier during registration and devices to read and edit the handset s firmware The pricing for unlocking a device will vary depending on the network it is locked to and the handset model itself as each unlock code is unique to each individual handset Unlock code generators edit There are online services that will provide an IMEI unlocking service for DCT4 and DCT3 Nokia mobile phones citation needed This method of unlock requires the user to know which carrier the mobile phone is locked to and also needs to provide an IMEI Generally older model Nokia unlock codes are free and instantly retrievable by these services The unlock codes retrieved must be entered into the mobile phone using the keypad For DCT4 and DCT3 Nokia unlock codes consist of a key followed by pw 10 DCT3 or 15 DCT4 digits and another number ranging from 1 7 and finally ends with a Depending on the carrier which the phone is locked to only some codes will work with the mobile phone Most phones respond to the unlock codes ending in 1 or 7 however some phones are configured to allow only one of the seven codes to work The following is an example of a DCT4 DCT3 unlock code pw 931882753035021 7 DCT4 and DCT3 Nokia will only allow a maximum of five unlock attempts using the unlock code method After five incorrect codes have been inputted the phone will not allow the user to try any more codes even if it is correct and will require the owner to try other unlock methods Laws and practices editThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources SIM lock news newspapers books scholar JSTOR August 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message Many countries listed below have some form of SIM locking laws specifying the period of SIM locking and the cost of obtaining unlocking codes Andorra edit In Andorra the state owned communications mobile company Mobiland does not sell SIM locked phones As there is no competition consumers usually buy standard mobile phones that are not locked to any specific carrier citation needed Austria edit In Austria unlocking is allowed at any time by the owner of the device A lawsuit was decided in favor of a mobile operator who encouraged the unlocking of phones by providing links to free cheap unlocking services 14 T Mobile Austria charges 150 euros to unlock the iPhone for prepaid subscribers and in contract subscribers For subscribers who have finished their 2 year iPhone contract T Mobile Austria charges 50 euros to unlock the iPhone 15 Australia edit In Australia carriers can choose whether to SIM Network Lock handsets or not however in practice is rarely performed except in limited cases Almost all handsets available on the Australian market have no such restriction citation needed One law professor Dale Clapperton gave a talk stating that bundling iPhone and mobile phone service could be violating the Trade Practices Act 16 However no other legal professional or academic has come out in support of this viewpoint 17 This also doesn t address SIM locking per se only as applied to subsidised iPhone purchases and persistence of the lock beyond the contractual period citation needed Belgium edit Until 2007 Belgium had laws prohibiting bundling but they were challenged as violating European Directive 2005 29 EC The Unfair Commercial Practices Directive On April 23 2009 the European Court of Justice ruled against Belgium and struck down Belgium s anti bundling law 18 The Belgian government was given until May 2009 to change the law failing which the European Commission would commence proceedings against Belgium citation needed This leaves Canada China Singapore and Israel as the only countries in the world that forbid SIM locking and contract phone bundling outright 19 5 Chile initiated a ban as of January 1 2012 Brazil edit In Brazil SIM locks are not prohibited However the mobile carrier must inform the consumer of the existence of a SIM lock Anatel Brazil s telecom regulator requires the carrier to unlock free of charge the mobile phone if required by the user After this regulation most telecom operators started voluntarily unlocking the devices as soon as it was purchased so one could leave the store with an unlocked phone 20 Canada edit Under revisions to the Canadian Radio television and Telecommunications Commission CRTC Wireless Code of Conduct effective 1 December 2017 all new devices must be sold unlocked and carriers must offer to unlock phones purchased prior to this date free of charge 5 Fees may be required if the customer was not under a contract or prepaid plan with the carrier 21 After the implementation of this rule Bell Canada initially refused to offer unlocks for users who were not customers of the carrier in contrast to Rogers and Telus but reversed course in February 2018 due to public backlash 22 23 In a filing to the CRTC in August 2018 Bell also stated that it had begun to reimplement SIM locks on unsold phones as an anti theft and safety measure the phones are unlocked during the activation process when sold to a customer citing increases in theft from store stocks since the implementation of the prohibition 24 Under the original version of the Wireless Code implemented 2013 carriers were required to offer unlocks no later than 90 calendar days from the start of a contract for subsidized devices or immediately upon purchase of an unsubsidized device The Code however did not expressly prohibit carriers from charging an unlock fee 5 25 Prior to the introduction of the Wireless Code New Democratic Party MP Bruce Hyer first attempted to mandate SIM unlocking at the end of cell phone contracts when he introduced a private member s bill entitled the Cell Phone Freedom Act in 2010 The act would not have banned SIM locking but would have required wireless carriers to unlock phones at no charge at the end of a cell phone contract The bill was introduced in two sessions of parliament but failed to pass either time citation needed China edit Under a regulation enacted by the Ministry of Industry and Information Technology locking phones to a specific carrier is prohibited if other carriers are also using the same type of network technology Therefore all phones approved to be sold in China are never locked to begin with regardless of whether the consumer purchased the phone under a contract or not However since all three Chinese carriers each uses a different network technology after the adoption of 3G carriers started to ask phone manufacturers to disable support for network technologies not used by such carrier even if the phone has been originally designed to be capable of supporting those network technologies Such a move does not result in violation of the ban on phone locking For example an iPhone 6 was designed to be capable of supporting LTE FDD LTE TD CDMA and WCDMA technologies but China Mobile reached a deal with Apple to create a special model for China Mobile in addition to the off contract retail model sold by Apple and third party vendors with the capability to support LTE FDD CDMA WCDMA which are the technologies not used by China Mobile disabled effectively making such special contract model incompatible with the 3G and 4G networks of other carriers even though such phones are never locked citation needed Colombia edit Starting October 1 2011 all the mobile telephone services providers must sell to all users unlocked devices and provide free of charge support to unlock previously sold devices This regulation was ordered to enable mobile number portability and to facilitate the reduction on costs ordered simultaneously 26 Chile edit Since Chile 1 January 2012 newly sold phones must be unlocked Previously bought locked phones had to be unlocked for free The regulation was put in place in order to implement mobile number portability 6 However the law only requires phones to be usable with all Chilean providers It does not cover international unlocking for use outside Chile so users may have to pay for the unlocking service citation needed A new related issue is present since 23 September 2017 every IMEI have to be registered so the phone works in the country For local carriers they do the process but to use a phone from outside the country each user has to register it IMEI Registration 27 Croatia edit In Croatia for devices bought on contract the mobile operator must provide the unlock code on the user s request free of charge Such request can be made immediately after buying the phone and the operator has a 15 day period to fulfill the request For devices bought on a prepaid plan the user has to wait at least 12 months before submitting such request 28 Denmark edit The carrier can choose to bind contracts up to 6 months from the contract s start Many of the carriers choose not to lock the phones Only Hi3G 3 lock their phones but can only do so for six months 29 If the phone needs to be unlocked within the first six months the carrier can charge DKK 500 67 29 for the unlock After six months the carrier is obliged by law to unlock the phone free of charge But the consumer needs to contact the original supplier and provide the IMEI and original phone number for which the phone was sold citation needed Ecuador edit Although there is no specific law preventing SIM locking as of December 2009 Ecuador s two biggest carriers Porta and Movistar unlock phones previously sold by them without charge 30 European Union edit Countries in the European Union EU each have their own legislation on SIM locking but must comply with the EU Unfair Commercial Practices Directive Directive 2005 29 EC of 2005 As noted above this directive has been successfully applied in Belgium to overturn that country s previous ban on bundling phones with contracts However carriers in many countries in the EU do not necessarily associate a phone s SIM lock status to the customer s tie in contract status Finland edit In Finland carriers are not allowed to sell SIM locked GSM phones nor are they allowed to offer tie in sales on GSM equipment Under Finnish law a tie in sale is defined as selling the equipment for a discounted price contingent on the consumer also acquiring a new service contract from the seller Under the terms of a provisional exception valid from 2006 until 2009 tie in sales were permitted with 3G handsets and 3G equipment which is purchased under such tie in sales may be SIM locked The SIM lock must be removed free of charge at the conclusion of the tie in contract within a maximum duration of 2 years 31 In 2008 the Finnish government was preparing to extend the exception and at the same time was considering reducing the duration of tie in contracts to one year 32 France edit In France SIM locks are not prohibited However the mobile operator must inform the consumer of the existence of a SIM lock and the subscriber has the right to request that the lock be removed at any time No later than three months after the subscription of the contract the mobile operator must systematically and free of charge provide the subscriber with a procedure to deactivate the SIM lock Proposal to shorten the time that operators may charge a fee for removing the SIM lock prior from six month to the three month deadline 33 Germany edit In Germany there does not appear to be any effective law regulating SIM locking original research For example the iPhone was initially offered for sale in Germany exclusively through T Mobile and it was locked to T Mobile s network They began to provide unlocking codes for that phone after they were sued by Vodafone and a temporary injunction was issued requiring T Mobile to do so Vodafone s injunction was later overturned and the iPhone is again available exclusively locked to T Mobile 34 While T Mobile Germany told the court that they would unlock the iPhone after the contract they were doing it voluntarily citation needed While SIM locking is legal a court ruled in 2012 that providers must clearly inform potential customers about the SIM lock 35 As of 2015 usually only prepaid mobile phones are sold with a SIM lock Phones sold with a contract stipulating monthly payments are not typically locked as the monthly payments are due no matter what network the phone is used on Also most providers will unlock the phone on demand Usually a fee is charged during the first two years after purchase afterwards the unlocking is free As of 2022 new phones are rarely distributed with a SIM lock 36 old phones however may still be locked Honduras edit In Honduras there is a general law applicable to all consumer relations engaged in the national territory and provided by natural or legal persons public or private This law is called Ley de Proteccion al Consumidor 37 or Consumer Protection Act of Honduras approved by Legislative Decree No 24 2008 and it regulates the activities of any goods and services providers stating the principles that they must follow in order to operate in this country Article 20 of this law states the prohibitions that sellers are obliged to abide when selling a good or providing a service to people Paragraph 7 of this article states that it is prohibited to a provider to place seals adhesives duct tapes or analogous mechanisms which prevent the consumer to make free use of the product except those mechanisms used by the manufacturer for warranty purposes Even though the existence of this law local carriers continue to apply SIM restrictions to the phones they sell For example the iPhone is sold by Claro in Honduras and is SIM locked 38 which suggests that this general consumer protection law does not prohibit SIM locking of cell phones 39 Hong Kong edit In Hong Kong carriers are not allowed to SIM lock a phone for the sole purpose of tying customers to their network But Hong Kong carriers can SIM lock a phone to protect the handset subsidy to enforce mobile plan contracts or to protect from theft 40 After the initial purchase subsidy has been recovered or the full cost of the equipment has been paid up under a rental or installment agreement the carrier must provide a detailed procedure for unlocking the equipment free of charge upon request citation needed India edit SIM locking is not common in India Initially each state in India had a different mobile network operator and roaming across states was prohibitive It was cheaper to change the SIM card than pay high roaming charges The number of inter state travelers demanded unlocked phones Usually phones and SIM cards are sold separately Mobile phone manufacturers sell phones directly to customers rather than through network operators Dual SIM phones are quite common in use with users choosing to make calls using a cheaper operator suitable for the particular call and time of the day from a Dual SIM phone without even switching it off This along with other factors encouraged competition among network operators and brought down the mobile phone call charges in from the initial 32 US 0 75 in 1996 to 0 50 US 0 005 approx in 2011 The rates still differ from one service provider to another and across different tariff schemes provided by the same operator Telecom Regulatory Authority of India TRAI is the independent regulator of the telecommunications business in India 41 established to check call rates and resolve all communication related issues and holds the upper hand in fixing call rates Israel edit According to the Arrangements Law passed on December 29 2010 Israeli carriers are banned from locking handsets sold by them and are obligated to unlock any handset previously sold at no charge 7 Italy edit Italy has SIM locking laws requiring that carriers must specify the amount of subsidies and allow subscribers to obtain unlocking codes after nine months by paying half of the listed subsidies After 18 months the SIM lock must be removed 42 Japan edit Japan s Ministry of Internal Affairs and Communications has legislated that all smartphones and tablets released after May 1 2015 by NTT DoCoMo au Okinawa Cellular and SoftBank Mobile the three major carriers in Japan must be sold without a SIM lock upon request from customers and without any cost to the customer involved Before that from 2011 until 2015 only NTT DoCoMo and au Okinawa Cellular would remove the SIM lock from phones with a SIM unlock function after the phone is kept or used at least six months after purchase 43 Monaco edit In Monaco the partially state owned communications mobile company Monaco Telecom does not sell SIM locked phones As there is no competition consumers usually buy standard mobile phones that are not locked to any specific carrier Netherlands edit Dutch mobile carriers have an agreement 44 with the Netherlands telecom regulator OPTA to establish a code of conduct 45 with respect to SIM locking specifically unlocking fees can be charged within the first 12 months and SIM lock cannot last longer than 12 months 46 In a 2002 letter to the Dutch Secretary of State of Economic Affairs OPTA stated that the telecom regulator has decided to start working on the formalization of the voluntary code of conduct into legislation 47 However a 2006 report written by the Dutch Ministry of Economic Affairs 48 stated that competition in the Dutch mobile market is sufficient and the formalization of the voluntary code of conduct into legislation is not needed Thus there are no SIM locking laws in the Netherlands 49 New Zealand edit Locking was planned in New Zealand before May 2008 50 when Vodafone New Zealand announced they would begin locking handsets The company had planned to charge 50 to unlock them but then relented It is speculated that the intention to lock was prompted by Telecom New Zealand building their new mobile network based on UMTS technology allowing handsets to change networks for the first time Until that point in time Telecom s network the only other mobile network at that time was based on CDMA technology meaning that it was not possible to change networks 2degrees were also building a mobile network based on UMTS at this time After pressure from the Commerce Commission Vodafone relented on its locking policy and will unlock any locked phones for free once they have been owned for nine months You can pay to have it unlocked prior to this 51 52 Following speculation of a new lower cost MNVO of Telecom XT details were leaked regarding the Skinny Mobile Network which would SIM lock handsets As of 2015 Vodafone Spark Skinny and 2Degrees all charged a 30 unlock fee for phones owned for less than 9 months As of 2020 Spark charges a 30 unlock fee for phones owned for less than 9 months unless the customer is on a Pay Monthly 24 Month Plan 2Degrees dropped its fees for unlocking phones 53 Norway edit Phones sold with a subscription are usually SIM locked to Norwegian carriers The fee varies depending on how long it has been since you purchased your mobile phone After 12 months you can enter the operator lock code yourself without paying for it citation needed Pakistan edit Ufone has started SIM Locking with the release of its new smartphone named Smart U5 developed by Emitac Services UAE U5 comes SIM locked to Ufone only No other SIM can be used on the U5 citation needed Peru edit According to OSIPTEL Peru s telecom regulator article 23 of the Terms of use mobile carriers can sell phones locked for a lower price for 12 18 or 24 month contracts but also must sell unlocked devices for the full price The same article dictates the customer can request the unlock code for free after 12 months from the purchase date no matter if the contract is still in place The sole exception is if the customer cancels the contract before its end and pays the remaining cost at which point the customer can request the device be unlocked at any time OSIPTEL plans to reduce the time customers must wait to remove their SIM locks to 6 months Portugal edit A 2006 study sponsored by the Portugal regulator ANACOM on handset subsidies and SIM locking concluded that there are no special regulatory concerns on offering subsidized SIM locked equipment in exchange for signing a contract tying a customer to a particular network Network providers are allowed to apply SIM locks as they see fit and they may voluntarily remove them if they choose to do so In the paper the author stated that the average unlocking fee charged by Portuguese carriers is 90 100 euros 54 A recently approved law 55 requires network operators to unlock a device free of charge if the respective contract has already expired But they refuse to do so charging at least 10 euros It also establishes limits to the fees that operators may charge to unlock a device while it is still under contract Romania edit Romanian telecom regulator ANCOM signed a code of conduct with several Romanian carriers providing that as of September 1 2009 mobile operators selling handsets locked within their own network have to inform clients whether the handset is locked and provide unlocking upon request It is self regulation by the carriers to prevent the regulator from actually imposing regulations on them If the handset is not purchased together with other electronic communications services the mobile telephony operator that sells it will bear the unlocking costs and will not bind the terminal unlocking by the purchase of other services or by the payment of other fees citation needed If the handset is purchased as part of a promotional package or at a preferential price and the customer requires the unlocking before the expiry of the minimum period provided in the contract for communications services concluded with the operator the customer will have to pay both the unlocking fee and the penalty for the anticipated unlocking of the handset The price charged to unlock handsets will not exceed the costs of this operation and operators are obliged to meet unlocking requests within 15 days 56 Russia edit SIM locking is not common in Russia but they have huge potentials to sell unlocked phones Most mobile phones sold in Russia doesn t have extensive bundlings customizations as well as the carrier specific bloatware Beeline branded phones are always locked to their network operator citation needed Serbia edit In telecommunication contracts it is frequent the practice to lock the use of a sim card of one operator with a phone acquired through the same mobile operator Obstructing the unlocking of the phone may be illegal if the consumer is entitled to it citation needed Singapore edit In 1997 Singapore s then telecommunications regulator Telecommunication Authority of Singapore now Infocomm Media Authority of Singapore enforced a legislation where telcos Singtel StarHub M1 Circles Life MyRepublic TPG Telecom and Zero1 are not allowed to SIM lock devices such as phones tablets and smartwatches that are imported and sold in Singapore 57 58 In August 1997 TAS warned at least one operator M1 for selling SIM locked phones 59 Spain edit In 1998 the then Spanish telecom regulator Tribunal de Defensa de la Competencia now Comision Nacional de los Mercados y la Competencia saw that Spanish mobile carriers already provided unlocking codes voluntarily for a fee within the first 12 months and for free after 12 months so it decided not to establish any legal framework in Spain 60 CMT has not revisited this decision since then therefore there are no SIM locking laws in Spain Sweden edit In Sweden carriers are required to unlock handsets after 12 months since purchase This applies both to on contract and pay as you go phones All carriers will charge a fee of 300 SEK approximately 45 or 350 SEK approximately 50 depending on carrier to unlock the handset However as of 2016 most carriers have stopped locking phones altogether citation needed Switzerland edit SIM locking may be particularly common there Swisscom began lifting SIM lock since July 2013 Sunrise prepaid mobile phones have a SIM lock for 2 years from purchase citation needed Thailand edit This section needs to be updated Please help update this article to reflect recent events or newly available information January 2019 Thailand is also another country that forbids outright SIM locking and as a result no phones are sold in the market are subsidized by carriers Up until recently mobile phone manufacturers have their own store fronts and mobile carriers are only the service providers citation needed Turkey edit SIM locking is forbidden by the regulatory authority in Turkiye since 2013 61 62 There are conflicting and varying reports about former practices of SIM locking by operators A newspaper column from 1997 criticizes Telsim s SIM locking policy you cannot quit Telsim until the phone becomes waste the only way to quit Telsim is buying a new phone 63 Turkcell s SIM locking policy has been subject to a lawsuit in 2001 resulting in Turkcell being fined 64 BlackBerry phones sold by Turkcell and Vodafone were SIM locked however could be unlocked on request without any conditions 65 Yet the SIM locking practice was only confined to phones sold by operators and it is not clear if operators enforced SIM locking on the phones sold by them tightly or not and if the practice was widespread Phones sold by other channels were strictly unlocked Three major mobile network operators Turkcell Turk Telekom and Vodafone still offer phones with long term contracts however these phones are sold unlocked citation needed United Kingdom edit In the United Kingdom mobile phone network providers are not obliged to provide unlocking even after the end of the contract Ofcom UK s telecom regulator allowed 3 UK to sell a mobile phone with the SIM card permanently superglued to the phone 66 Most operators offer some form of unlocking service depending on the state of the contract and the model of phone but usually for a charge The full Oftel 2002 SIM lock position paper specifies that there is no SIM locking law in the UK the regulator wants only consumer awareness The examples within the position paper are just examples of current carrier practices for illustration purposes but do not reflect any official Oftel regulation 67 The main networks often agree to unlock handsets for a charge either at the end of a contract or for prepaid handsets after several months Some Blackberry handsets supplied by Vodafone e g Storm 68 are examples of a UK carrier not offering unlocking codes As of April 2011 O2 will unlock any of their pay monthly phones for free even if they re still in contract with the exception of handsets made exclusively for them such as their Palm devices 69 Carphone Warehouse one of the largest UK phone retailers offers unlocked phones with most PAYG deals citation needed As of January 1 2014 all phones sold by 3 UK are unlocked Phones bought before this date will be unlocked for free 70 On 17 December 2019 Ofcom announced that it would explore a mandate banning SIM locking 71 On 27 October 2020 The UK s mobile networks are to be forbidden from selling phones locked to their services from December 2021 72 United States edit One of the two American GSM carriers T Mobile 73 will unlock handsets for those with active account in good standing for at least 40 days and no unlock code request in the last 90 days The other AT amp T Mobility is required to do so upon request with some exceptions and requirements after ninety days of active service under the terms of a class action settlement 74 Prior to the settlement AT amp T would 75 usually do so once one has concluded their contract and in some other situations AT amp T had in the past stated that it would not unlock iPhones under any circumstances regardless of the legality of doing so even after customers are out of contract However AT amp T has since announced that starting April 8 2012 it will begin unlocking off contract iPhones provided that the customer s account is in good standing 76 AT amp T also has an unannounced policy of unlocking iPhones for United States service members who are deployed overseas even if they are still under contract 77 Before carriers began voluntarily providing unlock codes for all phone models in 2010 the Electronic Frontier Foundation EFF successfully convinced the United States Copyright Office to allow an exemption to the general prohibition on circumvention of copyright protection systems under the Digital Millennium Copyright Act of 1998 for unlocking of phones through user self help sometimes referred to as hacking 78 This exemption has become less important now that most carriers are voluntarily providing unlock codes According to a ruling effective October 28 2012 it will be illegal to unlock phones purchased 90 days after this date or later without the carrier s permission 79 In other words users can already unlock phones they already own and phones purchased before January 29 2013 but phones purchased after this point can only be unlocked with the carrier s permission In March 2013 the Obama administration and the Federal Communications Commission said consumers should also be able to switch carriers and keep their actual phones 80 On August 1 2014 President Obama signed into law the Unlocking Consumer Choice and Wireless Competition Act S 517 113th Congress a bill legalizing unlocking cellphones in the US 81 82 The bill passed in the United States Senate on July 15 2014 and in the United States House of Representatives on July 25 2014 Sprint agreed to allow domestic unlocking on all mobile devices launched after February 15 2015 83 It is possible to buy unlocked phones in the U S Some online retailers sell phones that come unlocked from the manufacturer that is they were never locked in the first place citation needed See also editRegional lockout Android rooting International Mobile Equipment Identity IMEI Jailbreak computer science iOS jailbreaking Vendor lock in Bootloader unlockingReferences edit Price Christopher October 8 2011 In Depth Why iPhone 4S Can t use CDMA on GSM Networks PhoneNews com Mobile Media Ventures Retrieved September 24 2016 CDMA us es an antiquated Master Subsidy Lock code system What is a Locked Phone and Why do Carriers Lock Them 29 January 2014 10 Most Frequently Asked Questions Answered Pertaining the FCC Guidelines on Mobile Device Unlocking 27 February 2015 Ways to check the Network product code and country of your Phone Guidelines to find about your network provider a b c d Telecom Regulatory Policy CRTC 2017 200 CRTC 15 June 2017 Retrieved 15 June 2017 a b Empezo a regir desbloqueo de equipos celulares in Spanish Subsecretario de Telecomunicaciones 2 January 2012 Archived from the original on 2015 10 17 Retrieved 13 August 2015 Normativa de SUBTEL establece que desde el 01 de enero de 2012 todos los equipos terminales que sean utilizados en las redes moviles no deberan desde el momento de su ofrecimiento al publico bajo cualquier modalidad contractual estar bloqueados o afectos a configuraciones tecnicas que restrinjan su uso solo a la red de una operadora a b אושרו עוד שלוש מהפכות צרכניות בתחום הסלולר hebrew TheMarker Archived from the original on 2010 12 11 Retrieved 7 October 2014 TAS Fines M1 For Unauthorised Frequency Transmission And Issues Warning Over Sale Of SIM Locked Cellular Phones Press release Infocomm Development Authority of Singapore 1997 09 08 Archived from the original on 2007 08 12 Is iPhone unlocking illegal SimonlymetInternet Retrieved 23 September 2012 Different Types of Unlock Code for Changing Network MobileUnlocked com 17 August 2012 Box breaking investigation exposes retail staff breaches Mobile News Online Retrieved 7 October 2014 Fraud cases up financial losses down The Register Retrieved 7 October 2014 HMRC Stings Missing Traders for GBP12 Million www tax news com Archived from the original on 16 July 2011 Retrieved 13 January 2022 YESSS gegen T Mobile Klage erfolgreich Archived 2013 09 30 at the Wayback Machine Telekompresse Bericht uber das Urteil zugunsten von YESSS 2005 06 29 Entsperrung des iPhone Faq t mobile at 2010 05 14 Retrieved 2013 06 21 Latest Reviews February 25 2008 TechRepublic A Resource for IT Professionals Builderau com au Retrieved 2013 06 21 Belgium law was struck down Retrieved 7 October 2014 High iPhone Price Blamed on Subsidy Ban The Washington Post Retrieved 7 October 2014 Bloqueio in Portuguese Anatel Retrieved 25 October 2012 Wireless Code Request to clarify the device unlocking rules CRTC 2019 05 23 Retrieved 2019 06 05 Bell offers free phone unlocking for all following protests CBC News Retrieved 2018 08 13 It s ridiculous Critics blast Bell for not unlocking all phones for free under new CRTC rules CBC News Retrieved 2018 08 13 Bell returns to stocking carrier locked phones at retail locations MobileSyrup 2018 08 13 Retrieved 2018 08 13 Canadians can cancel their wireless contracts after two years under new CRTC wireless code CRTC Retrieved 2013 06 03 Desde el 1 de octubre los colombianos podran comprar los celulares con las bandas abiertas una medida del gobierno que fortalece los derechos de los usuarios de telecomunicaciones en el pais Mintic gov co Retrieved 2013 06 21 Homologacion y registro multibanda in Spanish Subsecretario de Telecomunicaciones 23 September 2017 Retrieved 13 August 2015 A partir del 23 de septiembre entra en vigencia la nueva normativa multibanda SAE la cual exige que se registre tu IMEI o numero unico de identificacion celular en las redes locales Chilenas Pravilnik o nacinu i uvjetima obavljanja djelatnosti elektronickih komunikacijskih mreza i usluga izmjene od NN 24 15 PDF HAKOM Retrieved 2015 10 10 a b Teleselskaber dropper simlas 20 May 2010 Claro Ecuador Porta net Archived from the original on 2011 03 03 Retrieved 2013 06 21 Communications Market Act PDF finlex fi Retrieved 22 March 2018 Newsroom thisisFINLAND finland fi Retrieved 22 March 2018 Proposition de loi relative aux telecommunications Senat fr Retrieved 2013 06 21 Deutsche Telekom Wins Ruling in IPhone Sales Dispute Update3 Bloomberg December 4 2007 Dr Cornelius Renner Nicht ohne SIM Lock Hinweis medienrecht blog com in German Retrieved 23 October 2015 Wie die Wettbewerbszentrale mitteilt hat das Landgericht Bonn mit Beschluss vom 1 Oktober 2012 11 O 39 12 die Werbung der Telekom ohne rechtzeitigen Hinweis auf das SIM Lock und das Netlock des Telefons als irrefuhrend verboten Ebert Marina SIMlock und Netlock Das sind die Unterschiede inside digital in German Retrieved 2022 11 29 Decreto No 24 2008 El Congreso Nacional PDF Sic gob hn Archived from the original PDF on 2012 07 10 Retrieved 2013 08 24 iPhone Wireless carrier support and features Support apple com 2013 06 17 Retrieved 2013 06 21 The Law Against Unlocking Cellphones Is Anti Consumer Anti Business and Anti Common Sense The Atlantic September 2010 Retrieved 2020 02 02 OFTA Office of the Telecommunications Authority Hong Kong TRAI website Retrieved 2008 08 19 Consumer friendlier SIM lock mechanism Archived from the original on 2012 03 08 Retrieved 2016 02 07 Mobile phone service operators lift SIM locks japantoday com Retrieved 22 March 2018 Dutch Ministry of Economic Affair paper stating OPTA agreement with Dutch mobile carriers 14 October 2010 Retrieved 7 October 2014 Establishment of Conduct of Conduct 14 October 2010 Retrieved 7 October 2014 OPTA website on sim locking opta nl Archived from the original on 20 July 2003 Retrieved 22 March 2018 OPTA letter to EZ Archived from the original PDF on 2012 03 17 Retrieved 7 October 2014 EZ 2006 Report 14 October 2010 Retrieved 7 October 2014 In the runup of the European launch of the iPhone a Dutch Macintosh website asked a lawyer to provide a simple summary of the SIM locking situation in the Netherlands macwereld nl Archived from the original on 17 September 2013 Retrieved 22 March 2018 Griffin Peter May 2 2008 Vodafone s mobile phone lock down The New Zealand Herald Retrieved November 11 2011 Unlock your mobile phone www vodafone co nz Retrieved 22 March 2018 Vodafone relents on mobile lock Stuff co nz May 27 2008 Retrieved November 11 2011 Unlock your phone 7 June 2015 Handset Subsidies an Empirical Investigation PDF anacom pt Retrieved 22 March 2018 ANACOM Desbloqueamento de telemoveis novas regras Anacom pt 2010 07 13 Retrieved 2013 06 21 Operatorii de telefonie mobila vor debloca la cerere telefoanele codate in reteaua proprie in Romanian Ancom 29 September 2009 Archived from the original on 2016 01 05 Switch mobile operator without changing SIM cards IMDA wants feedback on eSIM tech Channel NewsAsia Retrieved 2018 06 06 Consultation Paper for eSIM PDF Infocomm Media Development Authority 2018 06 06 Retrieved 2018 06 06 TAS Fines M1 For Unauthorised Frequency Transmission And Issues Warning Over Sale Of SIM Locked Cellular Phones Press release Infocomm Media Development Authority of Singapore 1997 09 08 Spanish telecom regulator decided not to legislate SIM locking in 1998 PDF cmt es Archived from the original PDF on 26 February 2012 Retrieved 22 March 2018 SIM kilit uygulamasi kaldirildi Milliyet in Turkish 2013 06 19 Retrieved 2023 07 13 Bilgi Teknolojileri ve Iletisim Kurumu SIM kilit uygulamasini kaldirdi www hurriyet com tr in Turkish 2013 06 19 Retrieved 2023 07 13 Tuketicinin Erkan abisi www hurriyet com tr in Turkish 1997 10 06 Retrieved 2023 07 13 Turkcell e 7 trilyon lira ceza arsiv ntv com tr Retrieved 2023 07 13 BLACKBERRY SIM KILIT KODU HAKKINDA HERSEY DonanimHaber Forum in Turkish 2010 07 13 Retrieved 2023 07 13 3 UK superglued SIM card into the cell phone Archived from the original on 12 January 2015 Retrieved 7 October 2014 OFCOM Review of SIM locking policy Ofcom Retrieved 7 October 2014 Vodafone UK s position on not offering unlocking codes to Blackberry Storm Vodafone Retrieved 7 October 2014 Unlocking your O2 device for use on a different network O2 February 2015 Retrieved 2020 02 02 Unlocking a 3 device for use on another network Retrieved 15 April 2017 Ofcom proposes locked handset ban 2019 12 17 Retrieved 2019 12 17 Mobile networks banned from selling locked phones 2020 10 27 Retrieved 2020 10 27 SIM Unlock your phone Support Support t mobile com Retrieved 2013 06 21 http www attlockinglawsuits com pdf meolinot pdf Archived by WebCite at https www webcitation org 67XpFxapm Pegoraro Rob 2008 05 29 It s Not The Money Can You Hear Me The Washington Post Retrieved 2010 05 23 Golson Jordan April 6 2012 AT amp T Will Unlock Off Contract iPhones Starting Sunday April 8 MacRumors com Retrieved April 11 2012 Golson Jordan April 9 2012 AT amp T Unlocking In Contract iPhones for Deployed Service Members MacRumors com Retrieved April 11 2012 United States Copyright Office July 27 2010 Federal Register Vol 75 No 143 Tuesday July 27 2010 Rules and Regulations PDF Federal Register Retrieved August 21 2012 United States Copyright Office October 22 2012 Exemption to Prohibition on Circumvention of Copyright Protection Systems for Access Control Technologies PDF Federal Register Wyatt Edward 4 March 2013 F C C Urges a Right to Unlock Cellphones The New York Times Retrieved 22 March 2018 Hattem Julian 25 July 2014 House votes to allow cellphone unlocking The Hill Retrieved 25 July 2014 President signs cell phone unlocking bill into law cnet August 2 2014 Legal Regulatory amp Consumer Resources Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title SIM lock amp oldid 1198384614, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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