Cellphone unlocking bill clears U.S.
House, heads to Obama
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[July 26, 2014]
By Alina Selyukh
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The U.S. House of
Representatives approved legislation on Friday to give mobile-phone
users the right to 'unlock' their devices and use them on competitors'
wireless networks, something that is now technically illegal.
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The legislation cleared the Senate last week. President Barack
Obama said in a statement that he looked forward to signing the bill
into law.
"The bill congress passed today is another step toward giving
ordinary Americans more flexibility and choice, so that they can
find a cell phone carrier that meets their needs and their budget,"
Obama said.
The lawmaking follows a 2012 ruling by the Library of Congress, the
minder of U.S. copyright law, that effectively made phone unlocking
illegal, even after the consumer completed the contract with its
wireless carrier.
U.S. wireless carriers often tether, or "lock," smartphones to their
networks to encourage consumers to renew mobile contracts.
Consumers, for their part, can often buy new devices at a heavily
subsidized price in return for committing to long-term contracts
with a single carrier.
In December, major wireless carriers - including Verizon Wireless,
AT&T Inc, Sprint Corp and T-Mobile US Inc - struck a voluntary
agreement with the Federal Communications Commission to make it
easier for consumers to unlock their phones after contracts expire.
Under current law, someone who unlocks their phone without
permission could face legal ramifications, including jail.
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New legislation, welcomed by consumer advocates, reinstates the
exemption given to mobile phones in the copyright law before the
controversial 2012 ruling by the Library of Congress and calls on
the officials there to reconsider the issue during its next round of
reviews in 2015, potentially expanding the exemption to tablets and
other devices.
"Today's action by the House moves us closer to alleviating any
confusion stemming from the Copyright Office’s 2012 decision," Jot
Carpenter, vice president of government affairs at the wireless
association CTIA, said in a statement.
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