Gov Says OK to Jailbreaking iPhones

The Library of Congress has made changes to the Digital Millennium Copyright Act that make it legal to jailbreak your iPhone, run any lawful app and adapt your iPhone to run on any compatible wireless network.
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July 27, 2010 - Today's most interesting stories in technology, media and entertainment:

Do you wish your iPhone worked with another carrier? Would you like it to have access to an entire world of apps that aren't available from the Apple App store? If so, you're in luck, because the Library of Congress has just made some changes to the Digital Millennium Copyright Act that will make it legal to jailbreak your iPhone, run any lawful app and, maybe most importantly adapt your iPhone to run on any compatible wireless network. Most of you probably won't take advantage of jailbreaking programs like Blackra1n, but if you do, you will open up your iPhone to a whole new world of apps that Apple really wishes you didn't have access to. Blackra1n is spelled b-l-a-c-k-r-a-1-n, the number 1 replaces the "I" in the word rain. What can you really do with a jailbroken iPhone?

AT&T continues to take drastic measures to fix its clogged network. The company announced that it plans on releasing software fixes in the coming weeks that will increase customers upload speeds, which have been suffering, apparently from a bug in Alcatel-Lucent's technology. The patch should be available in 2-3 weeks for most customers, just around the same time AT&T will deploy a new Wi-Fi zone in Chicago, similar to the one in Time's Square.

Bump is making it even easier to friend someone on Facebook or follow someone on Twitter. The iPhone app, known for making it insanely easy to exchange numbers, is now using its "bump" technology to tap into social networks, letting users become friends by simply bumping their phones together.

Today's Video -- Shelly Palmer Talks About The iPad vs. Kindle on FOX5's Good Day New York

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