Author Topic: Un-Jail break  (Read 2864 times)

So, I decided that jail breaking was boring and worthless, and I'm un-jail breaking my Ipod. Hope it doesn't forget up.

So, I decided that jail breaking was boring and worthless, and I'm un-jail breaking my Ipod. Hope it doesn't forget up.
What can't it do when it's jailbroke that it can when it's not?

What can't it do when it's jailbroke that it can when it's not?

Well, it made mine lag. Plus I end up having to disable everything every time I sleep over at my cousins, or he'll find out and tell his mom (She can get mean), Plus, I never use anything from cydia.

Well, it made mine lag. Plus I end up having to disable everything every time I sleep over at my cousins, or he'll find out and tell his mom (She can get mean), Plus, I never use anything from cydia.

what

I sleep over at my cousins, or he'll find out and tell his mom
So, someone else's parents are going to get upset because you did something to your device?

My mom knows and she doesn't give 2 stuffs.

So, someone else's parents are going to get upset because you did something to your device?

what are the effects of jailbreaking anyway

So, someone else's parents are going to get upset because you did something to your device?

Yep. They are nuts about illegal shtuff. (It's sorta illegal, sorta not.)

Yep. They are nuts about illegal shtuff. (It's sorta illegal, sorta not.)

what are the effects of jailbreaking anyway

Well you can download 3rd party apps. Like, 5 apps to a row, (Not 4), Backgrounds, modify what it says at the top, view ipod from pc, lotsa shtuff.

Well you can download 3rd party apps. Like, 5 apps to a row, (Not 4), Backgrounds, modify what it says at the top, view ipod from pc, lotsa shtuff.

sounds neat

Yep. They are nuts about illegal shtuff. (It's sorta illegal, sorta not.)

Quote from: mact-copyright-and-wikipedia
Jailbreaking an iPod or iPhone in the United States is legal "fair use", and does not violate copyright laws defined by the Digital Millennium Copyright Act. In response to a request by the Electronic Frontier Foundation, the U.S. Copyright Office explicitly recognized an exemption to the DMCA to permit jailbreaking in order to allow iPhone owners to use their phones with applications that are not available from Apple's store, and to unlock their iPhones for use with unapproved carriers.[45][46]  Apple  had previously filed comments opposing this exemption and indicated that they did consider jailbreaking to be a violation of copyright (and by implication prosecutable under the DMCA). Apple's request to define jailbreaking as a violation of copyright was denied as part of the 2009 DMCA rulemaking. In their ruling, the Library of Congress affirmed on July, 26, 2010 that jailbreaking is legal under U.S. copyright law.

Those parents might be handicapped, who knows.

Yep. They are nuts about illegal shtuff. (It's sorta illegal, sorta not.)
Steve Wazniak jailbroke his iphone, lolol.

Steve Wazniak jailbroke his iphone, lolol.
Who's that?

I wonder if its possible to jailbreak a Zune HD though.

Who's that?

I wonder if its possible to jailbreak a Zune HD though.

;-;


Anyways, it worked. (Suhweet!) So, I'm loading a backup and I'm gonna go nuts. Lul wut