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- 01-21-2004, 06:47 AM #1PaulieGuest
- 01-21-2004, 08:55 AM #2SebbyGuest
Re: dongle IMEI question
Paulie wrote:
> Will any Dongle change the IMEI on a T610?
Please do not ask this here. It is illegal, and there is no reason for
wanting to change the IMEI on a handset unless the phone is stolen and
subsequently blacklisted.
- 01-21-2004, 03:42 PM #3PaulieGuest
Re: dongle IMEI question
I have a right to ask you jerk off
On Wed, 21 Jan 2004 14:55:10 -0000, "Sebby" <nosp@m> wrote:
>Paulie wrote:
>
>> Will any Dongle change the IMEI on a T610?
>
>Please do not ask this here. It is illegal, and there is no reason for
>wanting to change the IMEI on a handset unless the phone is stolen and
>subsequently blacklisted.
>
- 01-21-2004, 05:59 PM #4MazeGuest
Re: dongle IMEI question
Paulie wrote:
> I have a right to ask you jerk off
>
> On Wed, 21 Jan 2004 14:55:10 -0000, "Sebby" <nosp@m> wrote:
>
>> Paulie wrote:
>>
>>> Will any Dongle change the IMEI on a T610?
>>
>> Please do not ask this here. It is illegal, and there is no reason
>> for wanting to change the IMEI on a handset unless the phone is
>> stolen and subsequently blacklisted.
you also have a right to go to jail if your doctoring stolen phones
:-)
- 01-21-2004, 06:23 PM #5PaulieGuest
Re: dongle IMEI question
well thats my problem isnt it. and its not phones.. its phone just
one.
On Wed, 21 Jan 2004 23:59:34 -0000, "Maze" <[email protected]> wrote:
>Paulie wrote:
>> I have a right to ask you jerk off
>>
>> On Wed, 21 Jan 2004 14:55:10 -0000, "Sebby" <nosp@m> wrote:
>>
>>> Paulie wrote:
>>>
>>>> Will any Dongle change the IMEI on a T610?
>>>
>>> Please do not ask this here. It is illegal, and there is no reason
>>> for wanting to change the IMEI on a handset unless the phone is
>>> stolen and subsequently blacklisted.
>
>you also have a right to go to jail if your doctoring stolen phones
>:-)
>
- 01-21-2004, 07:30 PM #6SebbyGuest
Re: dongle IMEI question
Paulie wrote:
>I have a right to ask you jerk off
No you don't. This isn't a newsgroup involved with anything illegal.
You're the "jerk off" for getting involved in illegal activities.
- 01-21-2004, 10:26 PM #7Daniel JuhnGuest
Re: dongle IMEI question
who set the rules for this ng? its not moderated.
any "rules" would be from your own isp. it is up to you to just shut the
**** up if it breeches your isp's t&c
"Sebby" <nosp@m> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> Paulie wrote:
>
> >I have a right to ask you jerk off
>
> No you don't. This isn't a newsgroup involved with anything illegal.
>
> You're the "jerk off" for getting involved in illegal activities.
>
>
- 01-21-2004, 11:23 PM #8Ben MeasuresGuest
Re: dongle IMEI question
Daniel Juhn wrote:
> who set the rules for this ng? its not moderated.
> any "rules" would be from your own isp. it is up to you to just shut the
> **** up if it breeches your isp's t&c
>
> "Sebby" <nosp@m> wrote in message
> news:[email protected]...
>
>>Paulie wrote:
>>
>>
>>>I have a right to ask you jerk off
>>
>>No you don't. This isn't a newsgroup involved with anything illegal.
>>
>>You're the "jerk off" for getting involved in illegal activities.
>>
>>
>
>
>
Wow... a wealth of maturity. I see you'd use the knowledge to good
purpose...
--
Ben M.
----------------
What are Software Patents for?
To protect the small enterprise from bigger companies.
What do Software Patents do?
In its current form, they protect only companies with
big legal departments as they:
a.) Patent everything no matter how general
b.) Sue everybody. Even if the patent can be argued
invalid, small companies can ill-afford the
typical $500k cost of a law-suit (not to mention
years of harassment).
Don't let them take away your right to program
whatever you like. Make a stand on Software Patents
before its too late.
Read about the ongoing battle at http://swpat.ffii.org/
----------------
- 01-22-2004, 07:23 AM #9SebbyGuest
Re: dongle IMEI question
Daniel Juhn wrote:
> who set the rules for this ng? its not moderated.
> any "rules" would be from your own isp. it is up to you to just shut the
> **** up if it breeches your isp's t&c
Who cares if it's not moderated? There are various newsgroups that
'specialise' in illegal activities. Such questions can be taken there. This
newsgroup is for helping people with genuine problems, not for helping
people break the law.
Grow up.
- 01-22-2004, 03:38 PM #10Daniel JuhnGuest
Re: dongle IMEI question
> This
> newsgroup is for helping people
> with genuine problems, not for helping
> people break the law.
since when
- 01-22-2004, 04:59 PM #11SebbyGuest
Re: dongle IMEI question
Daniel Juhn wrote:
> since when
Get over yourself.
This conversation is over.
- 01-23-2004, 11:27 AM #12Dan DuncanGuest
Re: dongle IMEI question
Sebby <nosp@m> wrote:
> Please do not ask this here. It is illegal, and there is no reason for
> wanting to change the IMEI on a handset unless the phone is stolen and
> subsequently blacklisted.
I can think of at least one legitimate reason. Perhaps one is replacing a
broken phone for which one has registered software that uses
the IMEI for authorization. I don't know how applicable that is
to this case or the T610 in general, but a lot of the software for
the P800 uses the IMEI.
-DanD
--
# Dan Duncan (kd4igw) [email protected] http://pcisys.net/~dand
# "Contrariwise", continued Tweedledee, "If it was so, it might be; and if it
# were so, it would be; but as it isnt, it aint. Thats logic." LEWIS CARROLL
- 01-24-2004, 02:36 AM #13Lina och NiallGuest
Re: dongle IMEI question
"Dan Duncan" <[email protected]> skrev i meddelandet
news:[email protected]...
> I can think of at least one legitimate reason. Perhaps one is replacing a
> broken phone for which one has registered software that uses
> the IMEI for authorization. I don't know how applicable that is
> to this case or the T610 in general, but a lot of the software for
> the P800 uses the IMEI.
That might be 'legitimate' in the eyes of the user, but it would still be
illegal.....
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