Eventually, Android will either be locked down or the carriers will stop permitting them on there network. The carriers are in business to make money and if a particular type of phone, Android for example, is easy to crack so that users have access to features the carriers wish to charge for the carriers will stop selling those phones. If a particular type of credit card permitted you to get free money from a banks ATM you can bet the banks would stop offering that type of credit card.
So, make hay while you can, I guess, because before long the carriers will no longer tolerate having there services pirated without compensation. The easier it is to do and the more people that do it the sooner Android will be killed off. Once again, the carriers, who own the network you need to have the services you want, will at some point decide they will only offer and support phones that do not make it easy to steal from them.
The feature most likely to drive Sprint to this is the wifi hotspot feature, but there are other revenue areas that a rooted phone may deny the carriers the compensation they expect. As I've said before, if the carriers can't prevent you from access features they expect to be compensated for they will find other ways to get there money. I think the most likely route will be to meter your use and charge you based on your use. So, if you root your phone and have access to the hotspot feature without paying for it then they will get there money by charging you for the data you use.
Verizon and ATT are no doubt looking to see how long before Sprint goes under with the unlimited plans they still offer. When an average user goes from eating 200MB/month to 10GB/month without any more than a $10/month fee and some users will be at 20GB/month or more. If you increase the data use by 10X-100X or even more the carriers will expect to charge more or they will go out of business. Which is the more likely outcome?
Brian
Like what, besides the mobile hot spot, which arguably, puts a strain on the providers network? My old LG flip phone had bluetooth file xfer profiles provided by LG REMOVED by Verizon so they could charge you 25 cents to email pictures through THEIR network instead of bluetooth to your own PC, and the average user was not allowed to put their own mp3 file on it as a ring tone because Verizon was promoting Vcast (yay for bitpim). Is this acceptable?
How about what Verizon did to Skype making it require 3G and purposely not work on WiFi, then bitching about how people are using too much data and wanting to charge more for it? Is that acceptable?
<- I expect a class action lawsuit for this, forcing applications to use a data service you have to pay for instead of wifi thus not allowing you to manage your data useage. This is called entrapment among other things.
Hmm car manufacturers cannot tell you what rom you can flash or what mods can go on your car, and there would be an outcry if things like the CD player and backup camera were disabled, and only renabled if you went into contract to pay Ford or Toyota $10 a month. Why are phone carriers allowed to get away with it?
Phone carriers are going to need to face the music soon and suck it up that they are just bandwidth providers and can't lock you out of your property and nickel and time you for things that you can do over a USB cable.
Paying for value added content from a provider is ok. Paying for high data use is ok. Disabling stand alone features that are native to the device so you can charge a monthly fee for the priviledge of using it or changing apps to use a paid service instead of, say Wifi, and then locking it down from reversing those changes is not.
I understand people abusing the mobile hotspot thing being a huge resource hog and providers needing to do something about it, I support that 100%. That is a tangible and measureable service/resource being provided. However providers can cry me a river that they aren't able to find a way to charge me 25 cents every time I press a button or launch an app.
Yeah I'm totally stealing from Verizon if I rip my own music and put it on my phone instead of using VCast or use Wifi when I can instead of being locked down to 3G. Give me a break.
I say bring on the use charges, that way everything will simply be data and phone providers become a ISP and no longer feel they have to lock down the device. Then it doesn't matter what you run, locked, rooted, whatever, data is data and when you need that outside connection to the world sooner or later in the middle of nowhere, the providers are there to provide that service and make money. But it's a double edged sword, because once they do charge for bandwidth used, it will justify and open the door for massive retaliatory lawsuits if they charge for data use, and at the same time continue to lock down your phones with crippled apps that REQUIRE you to use 3G when those apps were previously otherwise perfectly capable of using Wifi.
So bring it on.
With phones becoming more PC like, average users are going to start becoming aware of things that are and would have never been tolerated on your home PC/car/etc, and tolerance for cell carriers totalitarian black boxing methods will deminish. It's only a matter of time. They are in a panic and trying to delay it as long as they can, just like the music & entertainment industry, but it's inevitable: cell carriers WILL become nothing more than bandwidth providers and ISPs.