The *iPhone *Dev Team on Wednesday released the latest hack that allows a
jailbroken iPhone 4 to be unlocked and used on any wireless carrier.

The unlock solution is called *"ultrasn0w,"* and works with the latest
version of Apple's smartphone, as well as iPhone 3G and iPhone 3GS.

But to use it requires an iPhone that's been jailbroken. The same group
released a jailbreak program for the iPhone 4 over the weekend by exploiting
*a security hole in the mobile version of the Safari browser*. That
jailbreak brought attention to the fact that navigating to a certain site
via any iOS device can present the exploit as a simple PDF link, which
requires no explicit user action short of clicking a link. It can then
launch an exploit that takes advantage of the way the PDF viewer loads
fonts, which could enable a program to have unrestricted access to the
device. Apple says it is looking into the problem.

Jailbreaking an iPhone is still considered by Apple as a quick way to void
the warranty since the act breaks the user agreement. But legally, it's now
allowed. Last week the U.S. Copyright Office amended the Digital Millennium
Copyright Act to allow consumers to bypass a handset manufacturer's
protection mechanisms to allow "handsets to execute software applications."
But while handset owners are explicitly allowed to jailbreak their own
phones, the Copyright Office *did not appear to extend that to allow third
parties to supply jailbreaking software *in order to switch carriers.


@CNET

Regards
Sandeep Thakur

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