
Say it with us now: "Here we go again." Just months after a particular
eFuse predicament left legions of
Droid X owners fuming, it seems that an all-too-familiar scenario is presenting itself to the earliest of
T-Mobile G2 buyers. As the story goes, there's a problematic microchip embedded into the handset which "prevents device owners from making permanent changes that allow custom modifications to the Android operating system." That's according to a lengthy
New America report on the issue, which outright proclaims that a hardware rootkit "restricts modifications to a device owned by the user." In other words, if you install some fishy (or not fishy, for that matter) third party ROM, the phone is capable of overriding your software changes and reinstalling the original firmware -- makes perfect sense considering how earlier roots were "
vanishing" post-reboot. Needless to say, this isn't exactly
going over well with the tinkering community, and a 40+ page thread has already exploded over at
xda developers. The silver lining isn't tough to spot, though -- chances are someone with ample time and sufficient coding skills will be able to
circumvent this nonsense by the time the G2 actually finds its way
back into stock.
T-Mobile G2 said to have 'hardware rootkit' that restricts modifications originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 06 Oct 2010 12:39:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
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