Motorola Does Openness Wrong; Bricks Your Droid X If You Tamper
from the that's-not-open dept
Part of the key selling point of the whole concept of Android-based smartphones was that they were open to tinkering. Apparently, Motorola thinks somewhat differently about that. paperbag was the first of a whole bunch of you to point to variations on the story that Motorola has put a thing called "eFuse" on the Droid X which will effectively brick your phone if you try to mess with the software.If you look around, a lot of people who said they would originally buy a Droid X are saying they won't do it now, just on principle. Bricking a phone that someone bought, just because they want to change the software themselves is pretty abhorrent. Motorola's response to the concerns isn't winning over many people either. They flat-out say that if you don't like it, you should buy another phone:
We understand there is a community of developers interested in going beyond Android application development and experimenting with Android system development and re-flashing phones. For these developers, we highly recommend obtaining either a Google ADP1 developer phone or a Nexus One, both of which are intended for these purposes. At this time, Motorola Android-based handsets are intended for use by consumers and Android application developers, and we have currently chosen not to go into the business of providing fully unlocked developer phones.I think they're missing the point. The fact is most consumers won't tinker with the underlying software of their phone, but if they do want to, they should be allowed to do so without having Motorola destroy the device.
The use of open source software, such as the Linux kernel or the Android platform, in a consumer device does not require the handset running such software to be open for re-flashing. We comply with the licenses, including GPLv2, for each of the open source packages in our handsets. We post appropriate notices as part of the legal information on the handset and post source code, where required, at http://opensource.motorola.com. Securing the software on our handsets, thereby preventing a non-Motorola ROM image from being loaded, has been our common practice for many years. This practice is driven by a number of different business factors. When we do deviate from our normal practice, such as we did with the DROID, there is a specific business reason for doing so. We understand this can result in some confusion, and apologize for any frustration.
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Filed Under: bricking, droid x, efuse, openness
Companies: motorola
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Re:
Look, you can say "Go buy another phone" if you are the market leader right now and you can't stock enough products (aka Apple and their iPhone4 with problems). If you're the underdog right now, you do whatever you could to sell one more unit.
Motorola is still living in their fantasy world where their one-hit-wonder Razr is making them a company of significance... years ago.
Time for a rude awakening.
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Heh. Reinforces the fact that I'm not involved with who advertises on the site, nor does it impact our editorial in the slightest.
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Will they? Unless I'm mistaken, Android 2.2 has been released, and yet my Moto Droid tells me there are no updates available, despite the fact that it's running 2.1. I really wouldn't care all that much, except the ScummVM app I've been desperately trying to run won't on 2.1....
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Re: Re: Yo Dark Helmet!
Very spiffy Android OS mod... I believe they recently updated theirs to 2.2
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Re: Re: Re: Yo Dark Helmet!
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Yo Dark Helmet!
CyanogenMod is to Android as TinyXP is to Windows XP.
More or less.
; P
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Yo Dark Helmet!
I just rooted a coworker's Droid Incredible, and lemme tell ya, it's about 300 times easier than when I rooted my Droid. Litterally, I just clicked a button and waited 2 minutes.
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Yo Dark Helmet!
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Yo Dark Helmet!
You would not believe what it took to root my MyTouch 3G... fricking nightmare.
In the process, I did learn it's hard as hell to brick my phone though.
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Yo Dark Helmet!
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Yo Dark Helmet!
Can't say what the functionality is exactly, but I can vouch for the Cyanogen camp. It's probably the most respected ROM cooking outfit in existence.
Cut to a brief explanation, they take the stock ROM of a good phone, strip out any bloatware or carrier-specific crap apps, tweak the default settings for better performance (most OEM defaults emphasize battery life), and then add a few useful feature and apps like tethering, battery meters, terminal consoles, etc. Among geeks, these ROMs are widely regarded as far better than stock OEM or carrier ROMs.
From there, the individual is free to add and remove their own customizations - unlike OEM or carrier ROMs, which prevent you from removing apps you might not want, like 'VZW Music store' or 'Get Ringtones'.
The downside is you have to be a geek to install the ROM, and then you are off the mainstream if you have a support issue. You can't walk into a T-mo store if you have a Cyanogen ROM and ask "how do I move apps to the SD card?"
Typically, however, the first people to get Android updates are Nexus One owners, followed by cooked ROM users, followed by OEM-branded purchasers, followed by people who bought carrier-subsidized phones. The majority fall into the last camp, which often NEVER see the OS updates at all.
In this case, Motorola are just being deliberate jerks to the very people who want to buy their excellent hardware and take it to the next level. They probably have some business motive - like they don't want the link to their ringtone store deleted - and as such put in the poison pill. Total revenue gain = 0 additional ringtones sold. Total revenue lost = a bunch of early adopters, evangelists, phone lovers, and geeks that you just sent over to Nexus One...and any friends and family that they influence.
Bad call Moto. Which reminds me, I told a friend to buy a Droid X this weekend, and I'm gonna call him right now and tell him to go with the Incredible from HTC instead.
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I agree. It's a bit vindictive to purposely do such a thing, but at least they are up front about it.
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XD
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What in the world does Grand Theft Auto have to do with this?
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GTA got bricked because people were accessing its unpublicized capabilities.
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this opens a wealth of liabilities and is a horrible job. It seems like motorola doesn't like success.
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Consumer **hardware** shouldn't have a self-destruct switch.
What other products would people accept hardware self-destruct mechanisms that prevent people from working on them or repairing them? Your car? Your lawnmower? Your toaster? Your Microwave? Your house? Your home computer? I'd say none. And I'd say neither should the phone I buy and ***own***.
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Re: Consumer **hardware** shouldn't have a self-destruct switch.
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Re: Consumer **hardware** shouldn't have a self-destruct switch.
The only devices that I can think of where this is standard equipment were the one-time-play briefing devices on the Mission Impossible TV Show (Where the briefing ended "This Device will Self Destruct in 10 Seconds" - Poof).
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Re: Consumer **hardware** shouldn't have a self-destruct switch.
Media. Amazon movie rentals self destruct after 24hrs. If I have a DVD, and it is getting scratched, I COULD copy it to have a backup, which is a sort of repair. But there are deliberate tools, AND legal rules to prevent me.
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It seems like a huge security flaw. If someone were to hack into verizon or MOT change a couple bytes on an sbf file on their upgrade servers. Bam a couple million peolpe with bricked phones. Or the unintentional could occur, like a single IBM employee taking out a world bank for seven hours last week.
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Droid does
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Good to know
Securing the software on our handsets, thereby preventing a non-Motorola ROM image from being loaded, has been our common practice for many years.
Correct me if I am wrong here, but wasn't the Motorola RAZR one of the easiest to modify phones ever?
Also, is it possible that the eFuse and its functions are being overrated just because its news right now?
http://www.droid-life.com/2010/07/15/enough-with-the-efuse-talk-already/
I cannot say that I am a regular at droid-life so I am not going to say its a great source of information.
Along the lines of whether the eFuse is a great stopper or not, claiming that it is will only make some hackers very determined to break it. I don't doubt at all that with time it will be broken.
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Re: Good to know
There are also dozens of free applications that allowed you to change OEM settings, such as the text on the outer display, as well as various other internal settings that are normally untouchable. If you're feeling spunky you could also flash the ROM to a stock Motorola one if you wanted to remove all carrier branding without a whole lot of effort.
Long story short, yes, the representative that said that is full of shit.
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Re: Good to know
I also owned a v3t RAZR and had a modded ROM on that, too. I did alot more with those two phones than you were ever supposed to. Motorola didn't make it hard at all, at least, not after all the russian coders had their time with it. (It seemed like all the mods came from Russia for the RAZR when I was using it.)
This shit is dumb. I won't be heading to Verizon for a Droid X until this has (and it WILL) been eliminated or completely bypassed by modders, coders and hackers.
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Bend Over Motorola....
Your eFuse is now the likely target of a host of mal-ware hackers.
Tasty target too. One that burns the evidence of the crime.
Can you smell the Class-Action lawyers a commin'?
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They aren't thinking ahead...or looking at the past
Somebody is going to have their phone trip it's eFuse for no reason at all, and they are going to get very, very angry. And then Moto is going to have a PR problem and a lawsuit problem, and for what? So that the 1/10 of 1% of their buyers who might have fooled with the software otherwise can't do so?
Someone on Moto's board should be asking the Droid X product guys why this is worth risking all that.
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Why...
You can argue that you should be able to make your phone act as a free WiFi HotSpot for free. But you can't argue that they have to make it easy for you to do that.
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Re: Why...
that's the thing. it will be easy once the right hacker takes up the challenge. once that happens, where does this leave motorola?
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Re: Why...
There is no more requirement for a phone to be used 'legitimately' than 'legally'. Of course, no-one wants people hacking the SERVICE, but what we are talking about is legal tinkering with the actual phone, not hacking into the network or something like that. So there is no more requirement for Motorola to 'brick' a phone than to have Ford 'brick' a car for being used in a robbery - or going over a speed limit.
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Re: Why...
Strawman alert! That's not what's being discussed. Google allows you to modify the Nexus 1, but that doesn't let you "make free calls or browse the web for free". Unless, that is, you're talking about VOIP and WiFi, which wouldn't be "wrong" at all.
You can argue that you should be able to make your phone act as a free WiFi HotSpot for free.
This really sounds like someone working for AT&T because that argument sounds about as lame as AT&T's claim that Google is using AT&T's network "for free". It's a bunch of bull.
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Re: Why...
JD claimed:
You mean, like the way that, because I’m allowed to run anything I like on my PC, I can access sites that offer information for free, and skip those that want to charge for it?
Is this wrong in one case, but not the other?
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Droid/Milestone already have something like this in place
This is similar to the milestone, difficult but not impossible.
Also, for the person saying that they get no update with their 2.1 device but 2.2 has been released: 2.2 has only been released to developers and carriers, meaning they have to make sure it works on their handsets as they want it to (adding Sense UI, or MotoBlur, other branded or contractually prepackaged apps), then they release it to the consumers. Its pretty standard stuff in the phone business (hardware to service provider, then service provider to consumer). Obviously the Nexus one is excluded since it is sold directly from Google, and they can bypass the service provider.
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Re: Droid/Milestone already have something like this in place
I think that was the point. Although it's been released to the Motoroala and the Carriers, they have yet to release the update to their users. This is even though it was available to the carriers for testing before it was released, so they should have had it ready to go by the time it was released or shortly thereafter. But, I suppose they didn't see any real reason to. I mean, why should they? You already bought the phone and signed the contract.
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What's their disaster plan like?
The only people that will ever win from this are the lawyers.
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I love my droid!
That said...
I will never buy another Motorola product until I am confident this will not happen on future devices.
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"number of different business factors"
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Logic
Oh! You mean that reason why people started saying the droid was better then the iPhone? The reason why people started looking at Motorola like they might become a contender again? That reason?
If your normal practice is losing market share, I'd think some deviation would be welcome.
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I am now in the market for an Android phone.
Well MOTO you are off my list.
OR should I say you are now on the LIST with APPLE
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Commercial change
Droid does*
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Count me in, or would it be out?
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I hate MotoBlur, just like I hate Windows ... imagine if your computer was destroyed after installing Linux.
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wish I knew this before buying ... and the way the HTC phones are getting stocked anytime soon I am screwed
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Milestone in Canada
Starting to look like the Droid was the exception, not the rule.
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Re: Milestone in Canada
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Hello HTC!!
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Re: Hello HTC!!
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Catch 22
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Re: Catch 22
Umm, you do, you just don't know it. I'd be super pissed if my car bricked itself when I decide to tweak it.
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Re: Catch 22
2- I pretty much doubt that you could make to phone emit more powerful radiation by tweaking the software.
3- What, you've never seen modded cars where you live? You know, cars: Those carriages without horses that go like "vroom". Modded cars have existed since forever (see hotrods).
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Now that is news worthy :)
How a once powerful company that paved the way to mobile frenzy got bypassed by the world is really a cautionary tale of how not to do things. The funny part is that they are still doing the same things that got them in the hole.
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misleading article
Not sure if you realized this but the message from Motorola you linked to is dated 2-12-2010 and in response to the Milestone being locked in Europe. There may be similarities to a situation with the DroidX but this is clearly not Motorola's response to the eFuse controversy started by the mobilecrunch article.
In fact, this report says several previous phones have used this same technology but it hasn't been put into use.
I'm not a fan of locking down hardware - I don't really see the point - but lets wait until there are actual reports of phones being bricked before sounding the alarm.
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Re: misleading article
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Defective by design.
More time needs to be spent making things work, not spent making things *not* work.
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They really don't get it
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deFuse that eFuse
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It's a defect...
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Just Doing What Their Customer Wants
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No longer a customer
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Who is missing the point?
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This is not the droid you are looking for ....
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