By definition, you don't own software, only a right to use it.
As jailbreaking for an iPhone has been found legal, and this is a matter of legal administration that could remove the right having to do with an owned device, I don't fully understand your objections. Ownership was considered in the first ruling.
And a subsidized phone is always paid in full, the ETF sees to that. And the retail prices are largely a fiction anyway. Phones are at best a hardware proposition taking the equivalent of an iPod Touch, and adding one or two radio chips and jacking the price up by hundreds of dollars to create the artificial value that makes a contract seem attractive.
I don't agree that it's the consumers trying to get full benefit of ownership who are the ones with unclean hands here.
As jailbreaking for an iPhone has been found legal, and this is a matter of legal administration that could remove the right having to do with an owned device, I don't fully understand your objections. Ownership was considered in the first ruling.
And a subsidized phone is always paid in full, the ETF sees to that. And the retail prices are largely a fiction anyway. Phones are at best a hardware proposition taking the equivalent of an iPod Touch, and adding one or two radio chips and jacking the price up by hundreds of dollars to create the artificial value that makes a contract seem attractive.
I don't agree that it's the consumers trying to get full benefit of ownership who are the ones with unclean hands here.