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Who Would Have Thought the iPhone Would Become a Political Issue?

By Annalee Newitz, AlterNet. Posted July 17, 2007.


So what's the big deal? Why do people even want a $600 phone, and why has this luxury device for the pampered techie become such a hot political issue?
Annalee Newitz

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Also by Annalee Newitz

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The marketing maestros at Apple have turned the iPhone into the summer's biggest consumer electronics blockbuster, and they didn't even have to pay Michael Bay millions of bucks to write robot piss jokes to do it. Everybody's talking about the damn things -- of course the usual gizmo-obsessed pubs like Wired and PC Magazine are drooling all over it, but some unexpectedly political critics and fans have gotten into the mix.

The tech community made its annoyance at iPhone boosterism felt when hacker David Maynor announced that he'd found a bug in Safari (the iPhone's Web browser) that would allow him to seize control of iPhones remotely. The Daily Show, which usually exhibits a modicum of geek savvy, blithely ignored tech criticisms and led off one episode last week with a breathy noncommentary on how the iPhone is the greatest thing ever. Then politicians started sounding off. Demos snarked at Republicans last week about the iPhone during a House subcommittee hearing on wireless innovation. Rep. Ed Markey (D-Mass.) told the committee that the iPhone was the "Hotel California" of mobiles because of an exclusive deal Apple cut with AT&T to provide network service for the multimedia devices. (Apparently Markey's one big pop culture moment was to listen to the Eagles' famous '70s song about a hotel where "you can check out any time you like, but you can never leave.")

CNET commentator Declan McCullagh spoke the latent convictions of many libertarian nerds when he responded to Markey's analogy: "Apple makes the iPhone. It has every right to sell it via only AT&T if it wishes. ... More broadly, Apple has the right to [make] iPhones only available for purchase on the third Monday of the month in even-numbered zip codes if it chooses." Activist group Free Press responded to ideas like McCullagh's by starting a "Free the iPhone" campaign (freetheiphone.org) designed to spur the Federal Communications Commission and Congress to consider passing regulations that would force vendors like Apple to make mobile phones interoperable with all phone network operators so that consumers could choose which carrier they want.

Meanwhile, digital freedom lovers have been up in arms over Apple's many closed-door policies for the phone. Not only are the damn things locked into using AT&T as a carrier, but iPhones are also designed to prevent users from writing additional software for them. Nothing but Apple-approved software may run on the iPhone. That means people who want to play music on the iPhone will have the same problems they have with iTunes on the iPod -- you can put as much music on the phone as you want, but you can't transfer it to another device. Nor can you choose a secure browser over Safari, or an e-mail program of your choice. Even free-software activist Richard Stallman is pissed about the iPhone, and he's a guy who rarely gives little toys from Apple a second thought.

So what's the big deal? Why do people even want a $600 phone, and why has this luxury device for the pampered techie become such a hot political issue? I think the answer to the first question is easy: the iPhone is the first truly cool convergence phone that combines multimedia with multispectrum goodies like Bluetooth, wi-fi, and of course, a phone network. Who doesn't wish to combine phones, iPods, and laptops into one nifty thing?

That's where politics come in. In the United States we have a long history of government regulations on the phone network, as well as on what can plug into the phone network, so naturally the public wonders what the government is going to do with the iPhone. Especially when other components of the iPhone, such as its ability to play music, touch on another government-regulated area: copyright law. And then there's another issue that few people have commented on, which is that Apple's chosen carrier for the iPhone, AT&T, has a history of letting the government spy on its phone networks. So every way you slice it, the iPhone is subject to government.

The iPhone is political because it somehow manages to capture the essence of authoritarianism in its shiny little box. Totally locked down, it runs only preapproved software on a prechosen phone network that is subject to government surveillance. Long live the iPhone! Long live democracy!

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Annalee Newitz is a surly media nerd who thinks the iPhone's telephone network makes surveillance as fun as iTunes made DRM.

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Ananalee , you are feeding the hype
Posted by: hot karlrove on Jul 17, 2007 10:12 AM   
Current rating: 2    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Please, no need to read another article on this gadget. The media is saturated with iphone stories.

If you wanted to be political and progressive, tell us about the working conditions of the assemble workers who make this device.

Meanwhile, our country continues to rot, EVEN WITH IPHONES.

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» Well, actually.... Posted by: Domokun
No music transfers? Yes, no, and maybe.
Posted by: ahmlco on Jul 17, 2007 2:41 PM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
"...you can put as much music on the phone as you want, but you can't transfer it to another device."

Well, if you bought a DRM'd song from iTunes that's true. But if you'd bought a non-DRM'd tune from iTunes that statement is false. It's also false if you'd simply copied your own mp3s to it, or had ripped your personal CD collection, or burned and re-ripped your iTunes purchases.

In this case, you're about as locked in as Houdini...

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I guess there really WAS nothing to write about this week, huh?
Posted by: wwittman on Jul 17, 2007 5:13 PM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Wow, this blows the lid off the whole...err, what? thing.

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Not bad on nailing iPhones.
Posted by: maxpayne on Jul 17, 2007 7:49 PM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The fact is they're owned by AT&T, the same company that is allowing government to FUCK the American people by spying on them. Ex-FBI convict Phillip Hanneson must be laughing his ribs off already. In any case, it figures that the best way our anti-American "government" and Corporate America can RAPE and FUCK the American people is to BRIBE them with "music" on their phones. The customers accept them, pay the motherfuckers, and the cycle of RAPING and FUCKING America to DEATH continues !

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Gotta love that phrase.
Posted by: charlief on Jul 18, 2007 4:19 AM   
Current rating: 2    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
"... digital freedom lovers..."
No really, what on earth does that mean?

My suggestion is Annalee Newitz should steer clear of tech stories until she does some research into both tech and err, business. I mean, who are these "people" she talks about who're having problems with their iPod?

This is a device that came late to the party [October 2001], when there were several other mp3 players who had the market to themselves. One by one they have found they've been unable to compete and dropped out of the market. The iPod's ease of use and its seamless integration [shackles and chains in Annalee's world] with the iTunes player/ripper/store, has ensured that millions of non-tech people could buy and use these devices on their computers with ease. No other company could live with that combination. Hence the overwhelming vote of millions of people who've bought an iPod. Remember Annalee, nobody's making these millions of people buy an iPod. They buy it 'cause they can figure out how to use and add their own CDs to their digital library without all the over-complicated Windows nonsense that came before it. That's why it's a success!

It really does just work. It's the player/ripper/store combo for the rest of us non-geeks. You should be applauding that Annalee not attempting a factually inaccurate FUD piece.

What's true about the mp3 player is true about the mobile phone. The software on phones is inscrutable, incomprehensible at best. And that's the key [other than the design and innovative UI]. Apple has installed OS X on this phone and if you're a Mac user you'll already know the advantages that can mean to useability. It's a phone that we can all use just like the mp3 player, and just like your computer - with ease.

Oh, and just like the iPod, the price you find so offensive will come down, like all tech stuff.

As for being "locked in" to AT&T. Utter nonsense. Annalee it's a business! It's capitalism. Don't like capitalism? Do something about it, until then Apple can choose to do what they want, they're not a monopoly. Get over it. Remember, it's Microsoft [the GOP's friend] that's the almost-dictatorial monopoly in this business, not Apple.

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» RE: Gotta love that phrase. Posted by: mejsmith
» RE: Gotta love that phrase. Posted by: mentalw
Qualifying statement
Posted by: charlief on Jul 18, 2007 5:32 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I should explain my "nonsense" comment about the AT&T 'lock-in'.

According to Jobs's own statement shortly before the launch of the iPhone, he explained that he'd approached Verizon with the deal first and Verizon CEO turned him down. Why would they do that? Because Verizon wanted to control the software and the whole User Interface. If you've ever used a Verizon cellphone, its software is the worst shambles I've ever come across. It sucks battery usage, has superfluous animated opening splash screens, is counter-intuitive and can take several screens to do even the most basic of tasks. Jobs, and Macintosh doesn't work like that.

That's the modus operandi of Apple, they control the whole widget to ensure that both hardware and software work seamlessly together. This isn't fanboy stuff, it's commercial and technical fact. If one supplier is providing the OS and many others supply the machine and yet more supply the peripherals, the chances of seamless integration is slim. With a cellphone that relies on its software, to allow a phone company to write that software for another manufacturer's equipment is a recipe for a shambles. Hence Apple's insistence on writing their own software [using some of the best software engineers around] for a device they made. Makes perfect business sense.

And that's why AT&T got the contract, essentially because other telcoms refused to let Apple write the software for Apple's own phone. So Jobs walked away. Is AT&T any worse than the others? No. Despite the angry and unnecessarily foul-mouthed comment from maxpayne above.

The fact that Annalee doesn't like the iPhone is obvious. Unfortunately that dislike colored and distorted her piece in such a way that she fell into the same trap that haters of Apple's demonstrated innovation, use all the time. Fear, Uncertainty and Doubt.

And for balance, there are 100 million owners of iPods and at its peak there was over 300 million owners of Walkmans. Where were all the FUDspreaders and anti-Walkman groups then I wonder?

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» RE: Qualifying statement Posted by: sausage
*Snorts*
Posted by: Mop Cheese on Jul 18, 2007 5:58 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Newitz said:

The iPhone is political because it somehow manages to capture the essence of authoritarianism in its shiny little box. Totally locked down, it runs only preapproved software on a prechosen phone network that is subject to government surveillance. Long live the iPhone! Long live democracy!

I laughed when I read this part. As a "libertarian nerd" I agree that the behind-the-scenes government control of the networks plays into it, but the way you wrote that article, you would think that selling one's products the way you want is the equivalent of actually conscripting people to buy them. At least that's the vibe I got. I wonder if you have the same animosity towards taxes or government regulations, none of which you have the option to avoid unless you flee its turf.

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Here we go again...
Posted by: ianfan on Jul 18, 2007 10:30 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It amazes me the way critical thought is just not acceptabled in US society. You can't just talk about issues in a detatched way, you have to be an advocate. Not only that, you have to be an extreme advocate. People just can't accept anything else.

Annalee can't write a piece about why she thinks the iPhone is a hot button topic for so many people and the media. Nope, she either has to be praising it without waiver or completely denouncing it. Even if that clearly is not what she is doing, that's all people will see.

Can't talk about communications regulation and it's history in the US. Nope. You're either a pure ruthless capitolist or you're a commie. Nothing in between. Must have an adgent to advocate. Nothing else computes anymore in our broken political spy glass...

Like so many other times on message boards and comment threads, the comments here are ridiculous for how much they view what is being said in exagerated terms. It's easy to argue against the ridiculous, and the general public has become so intellectually lazy it's the only way they can have discourse at this point. Really sad.

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I dream of iPhone
Posted by: DaBear on Jul 18, 2007 7:44 PM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
When the iPhone costs $150, isn't linked or locked into AT&T (the only dumbfucks who are slightly not as bad as Verizon, who is the Great Satan), and isn't the talk of everyone, I'll buy one. Even if Anti-Apple idiots burst a blood vessel over it still. I'm a Mac fan and addict and I won't change. But since I work insanely hard for every dollar I earn, I don't have the luxury to participate in bullshit about iPhone, or buy one for that matter. Nice job Annalee... but when are you going to write about the real thieves of tech, Gatesware? Now there's a piece a work...

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wow
Posted by: The Populist on Jul 19, 2007 5:57 AM   
Current rating: 2    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
They pay you to write?

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Damn
Posted by: PirateJesus on Jul 21, 2007 1:42 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
You mean I can't put Linux on an iPhone like I did on my iPod? I want to be able to play... Um... Or use, um... Okay, so they're no real useful applications I've found for it, but dammit, it's nifty to have.

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Libertarian seeds grow into Big Brother Apples
Posted by: sausage on Jul 21, 2007 6:37 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Remember Apple's groundbreaking "1984" television commercial (of course we do, after all a worker in Barak Obama's campaign re-edited it and uploaded it to YouTube)?

Back then, in 1984, the old Bell System's divestiture began. You see the way the old pre-divestiture system worked, AT&T was allowed monopoly status under governmental scrutiny, and evilly manufactured and owned everybody's phones (and the damn things never broke so one didn't need to buy a news one every year or two.) And wiretapping was strictly regulated by means of judicial oversight in the form of warrants. Also state governments held tighter control over the rates AT&T, and the few independent phone compaines, could charge its customers.

At about the same time as that Ma Bell was breaking up, Steve Jobs and Steve Wozniak's "1984" commercial was airing on the Super Bowl.

Fast forward to 2007, AT&T has stealthily reconstituted itself, from the carcasses of "Baby" Bells born of divestiture, into something of a merging monopoly sans governmental oversight. So it's perfectly legal for "maverick" Apple, and its libertarian founders, to enter into an exclusive and monopolistic deal with AT&T.

This may also have a salubrious effect for Dept. of Homeland Security snoops. Cellular telephones, unlike old fashinoned land lines, don't need to be "tapped." No need for warrants and sending agents into a telephone equipment office to set the tap. Just point a parabolic antenna skyward, hone in on a frequency and voila! DHS snoops can eavesdrop on conversations to their heart's content.

Isn't it nice that the two Steves, Jobs and Wozniak, and AT&T are so concerned with our American freedom, they're making it easier for Big Brother to monitor our cell phone conversations to stop terrorism before it starts?

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Grammatical error
Posted by: CarolL on Jul 21, 2007 7:16 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Sorry, but the editor in me just won't let this go: It should be, "Who'd _Have_ Thought the iPhone Would Become a Political Issue?"

As for me, I'd just like a phone that holds calls and gets good reception. I wish phone companies would focus on that for a change.

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» RE: Grammatical error Posted by: Voicedude
The battery is soldered in place.
Posted by: ABetterFuture on Jul 21, 2007 10:14 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
You have to send it back to apple to change the farcking batt'rys. Must be one of those "seamless unified MacApple synergies" or whatnot folks are on about this morning.

There is also no orientation queue on the device. You have to be gazing (lovingly or not) directly at it in order to dial.

Meh. I'll wait for a good, well-thought product, or I'll just use my mobile phone for calling landlinelubbers and my pda for movies, music, and everything else. If they'd release a version of skype for palm, then I'd be one step closer to having a device in my pocket that treats everything (music, video, email, event-tracking, communications) as a function of computing, rather than a phonIe that tries to be a pocket computer.

I'm sure that enough people will fork over their hard-earned money for an Iphone that apple engineers, executives, groundskeepers, etc. will be able to put food on their families. Why be angry about it? After all, other people are beta testing the Iphone so that the bugs get worked out by the time a similar product is cheap enough to seriously consider trading money for.

And for that, MacDaddy's, I thank you very much.

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this is NOT a political issue!
Posted by: Voicedude on Jul 21, 2007 11:59 AM   
Current rating: 2    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Alternet is getting more and more like grade school kids who pad a 100 word essay with 'the very, very, very, very end' - i.e. many of their recent articles are not even up to 'fluff piece' standards, much less what we come to expect here on this site. Alternet, please grow up a bit and get back on track...

That being said, the ONLY controversary here is that Apple - true to their policy of looking out for themselves and not their extemely loyal customers - got greedy and signed a deal with the flat-out WORST cellular provider on the planet: AT&T! The iPhone would be five times more popular if they hadn't!

Give 'em a year or two to get out of their deal with AT&T and (hopefully) allow us to choose our provider and watch how fast the sales improve! Because I gotta tell ya: I've seen one personally and it truly is the coolest new gadget that I've ever seen! I am the absolute LAST guy on earth to get new technology, but this is just that cool! Whether it's worth the $600 is up to you, but try one yourself and you will be amazed!

But Alternet, seriously....there's not ENOUGH crap going on with this administration for you guys to stay on point? I've read at least three stupid articles like this in the last week or so, and yet have seen little or nothing on Cheney's redefining his Branch assignation, the lawsuit with We The People Foundation, and all the other arrogant, unaccountable actions from this Scooter-pardoning fascist regime! Bush knows that we all hate him, but he doesn't care! He'll do what he damn well pleases! So, let's get back to what really matters. FIRST OFF: Putting IMPEACHMENT back on the table!

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1984 ways to lose
Posted by: pborau on Jul 21, 2007 12:17 PM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The frog-kick "responses" to such a general and not particularly critical article always result in a summary of naive, cultish, pseudo-hip sub-thinking about digital technology. The worn mythical rhetoric of, alternately, revolutionary posing or capitalist libertarianism associated with all things digital is as tiresome and obsolete as Marx or Hip-Hop. And the quack of "Apple vs. Microsoft" nonsense is like discussing the "merits" of Mutually Assured Deterrence (originally, balance of terror) or Who's Got The Smallpox In Their Fridge? Unfettered technology will build its own environment (hey, you dweebs, remember SkyNet?). If you've been convinced electronic communication, along with every other complex technology, can be handled better by unregulated private institutions rather than public utilities answerable to the citizenry you're going to get nothing but personal disservice, cultural dissolution and the new Pax Romana. Picture a gym-rat nerd wearing Gucci stomping on your face, forever.

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Not necessarily pro or anti iPhone...
Posted by: Blue Heron on Jul 21, 2007 1:49 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
but what I do think is that people are tired of having to look to corporations for the next hot thing. It may be human nature, but we want to be the hot things! Or at least I do! I want a LOT more freedom and creativity than what is being expressed with technology today. It needs to be an asset to me personally, not just some cool gizmo I show off to my buddies. Actually forums like these are hotter than little Hot Tech-Turd gadgets. You see the power of the human mind and spirit being conveyed directly. Maybe it's not 'hot' or flashy, but it's more real to be sure. Go buy a diamond coated iPhone, or whatever else is the current trend. I would rather continue my search for something that will liberate me and my fellow humans from codependency on corporations, or government or what have you. Will technology achieve this? Or some other means? These are more interesting questions to me. What the trust fund kids are buying these days is definitely not.

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useful topic, silly execution
Posted by: anniedine on Jul 21, 2007 5:17 PM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
When Alternet needs an article written for the average 20-something attention span and sophistication they need look no further than this writer. Now that you got that out of the way, can we have a real analysis of the issue of locked phones, etc.?

Oh, and by the way, the iPhone is something special as a device because of its huge advances in interface technologies (you have to see some of them to really get just how advanced they are). Those technologies can now make their way onto other devices that aren't just glamor gadgets (medical devices being one area).

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Why Complain? Buy AAPL, Apple Stock, and You Can Soon Afford the Phone
Posted by: sofla100 on Jul 21, 2007 9:06 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
If you want an I-Phone, but find it too expensive, just go ahead and buy some Apple stock. It is now pegged by some analysts to hit 205 by next year. As for the technology, it is the most technologically advanced phone, in terms of the interface and related functions, on the planet. I mean, the Blackberry's, etc., cannot even hold a candle to it. The damn thing has full internet capabilities well beyond what anyone else has. By the way, I don't own one yet, and if you can wait, it will drop in price, this is just the first generation. Also, yes, ATT sucks, but when they (ATT) upgrades to the 3.0 network, like Verizon, it should be a big improvement. ATT has no excuse not to do quickly with all the money they are making.

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The iPhone is not the root of all evil
Posted by: yakirz on Jul 22, 2007 7:10 AM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The iPhone is not an evil, republican elitist phone, and Apple is not the devil for choosing AT&T.

I am writing this on a MacBook, and have been using Macs since 1996. Apple's hardware and OS have always come at somewhat of a premium, and if you want it you can either pay full price the day it's released (whether the next iMac revision or the iPhone), or you can wait a few months, pick it up refurbished, and save. I bought my relatively new (but slightly out-of-date) MacBook for $899, not $1299.

I haven't bought an iPhone yet, because I think it needs some revision before it will be for me, but not because it's some evil device ready to destroy the lower-classes.

Apple had to choose someone for its service provider. I already used AT&T, so that will work in my favor. I would like 3G, more apps and a more stable device, but I'll probably get one eventually.

What I won't do is join the über-chic in deriding the iPhone because they're too cool for it, because it's "elitist," or because they're Micro$oft whores.

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What A Trivial BS Post
Posted by: neptune on Jul 22, 2007 3:09 PM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Who would have thought Alternet would post such brain dead nonsense. Get a life.

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Love or hate Apple if you like
Posted by: medbear on Jul 22, 2007 5:21 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The guy that a few years back sent the movie industry screaming to the courthouses for cracking the DVD codes (nicked "DVD-Jon" by some) didn't take long to crack the thingies that locks iPhone to a nettwork.

You still have to willingly part with $600, but if you do, there's ways to avoid being locked to AT&T.

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