i'm a little confused it seems tons of Devs have united and are trying to crack the bootloader for the GS3 for verizon but im a little lost as i am new to motorola phones.
Why has this not happen to any of the newer motorola droid phones? it seems there getting this thing cracked fast but the Droid 4 and razr still have locked boot loaders and these were more of a flag ship phone over the GS3. has no one made this big of a deal over a motorola phone?
Probably because Motorola bootloaders have been locked for quite some time, and nobody (that I am aware of) has managed to crack them.
The original Milestone's bootloader hasn't been cracked even.
Luckily, we can still get around the bootloader issue via safestrap, and I'm hoping the kexec exploit.
Was there this big of a uproar when the milestone came out? Or any other motorola phone with a locked boot loader? It just seems motorola is not that big of a deal compared to samsung
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icebear8 said:
Was there this big of a uproar when the milestone came out? Or any other motorola phone with a locked boot loader? It just seems motorola is not that big of a deal compared to samsung
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Quite the opposite, which is why we have SafeStrap. Remember, the locked bootloader is not exactly Moto's "fault", it's just that it is what the carrier asks of them. This may be for various reasons, including that the MPAA requires locked bootloaders on any device with Netflix preloaded. (Hence, the locked boot loader on the Nook Tablet)
Motorola, however, is one of the few companies to "properly" lock their device. When they say "locked" they mean it. No one has yet figured out a way around it, but instead we're investigating kexec and options like Safestrap that give us sometimes more options than other manufacturers, and without even having to hack the bootloader itself.
omniuni said:
Quite the opposite, which is why we have SafeStrap. Remember, the locked bootloader is not exactly Moto's "fault", it's just that it is what the carrier asks of them. This may be for various reasons, including that the MPAA requires locked bootloaders on any device with Netflix preloaded. (Hence, the locked boot loader on the Nook Tablet)
Motorola, however, is one of the few companies to "properly" lock their device. When they say "locked" they mean it. No one has yet figured out a way around it, but instead we're investigating kexec and options like Safestrap that give us sometimes more options than other manufacturers, and without even having to hack the bootloader itself.
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but i see alot of stuff saying moto was gonna make a program like HTC has that unlocked it for you is that true?
They had the program to unlock it, but verizon prevented them from releasing it. Also one reason I think that theres such an uproar about the gs3 is because there ARE other models of the gs3 with unlocked bootloaders and samsung promised to have unlocked phones, while moto has never had an unlocked phone since the OG droid.
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Related
If you're looking for something to ask motorola that will make our phones better, is possible for them to do and is almost somewhat expected (I keep thinking about how they say they're striving to work with the rom development community ...) feel free to post your thoughts for motorola here. An unlocked bootloader would allow us to run a custom kernel on our phones, I imagine CM9 would be up within days of motorola offering a bootloader unlock solution!!
Excellent point! I think begging for an early upgrade is silly, but asking for an unlocked bootloader would make our phones that much better. I would rather have a D3 with lots of Dev support, than a locked down D4. I came from a droid Incredible and the Dev support was great, and it breathed life into a phone that was somewhat dated.
Dear Moto, please unlock the bootloader.
Sent from my DROID3 using XDA App
Willis111 said:
I imagine CM9 would be up within days of motorola offering a bootloader unlock solution!!
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Running CM9 now... only real issues are Camera, B key not working on keyboard, and the data being somewhat flaky for people, although it works fine once you get it going. Just be patient, we have great devs and don't really need an unlock. It would be nice though.
Motorola is okay with unlocking the bootloader from what I've heard but Verizon doesn't want it. From locked bootloaders to forced bloatware to removing Google Wallet from the Nexus, its clear that Verizon just loves to screw with Android. When are they going to learn the most people only want to use your network, we could care less about anything you have to offer.
I would sign that petition
xt860, android 2.3.5, Eclipse 1.1.1
I'd be happy with an unlocked bootloader. This phone has the power to run ICS. Even if they never give us ICS, make it easy to make on our own...cause we sure as hell will.
spunker88 said:
Motorola is okay with unlocking the bootloader from what I've heard but Verizon doesn't want it. From locked bootloaders to forced bloatware to removing Google Wallet from the Nexus, its clear that Verizon just loves to screw with Android. When are they going to learn the most people only want to use your network, we could care less about anything you have to offer.
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idk y Verizon would let samsung unlock bootloaders and not motorola. Nexus is unlockable. Google Wallet is blocked becasue Verizon (+partners) spent $100Million (or something ridic) in a very similar banking product.
I was referencing a story where Verizon removed the option to unlock the bootloader on the Razr.
http://techcrunch.com/2011/10/24/mo...oader-tool-for-droid-razr-verizon-removes-it/
maybe we should start a petition to verizon to get a unlockable to all of there phones because its more and more on verizon then the companys, HTC listen, Moto said they would be nothing from Verizon
MrJudylicious said:
idk y Verizon would let samsung unlock bootloaders and not motorola. Nexus is unlockable.
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Since it is a development phone for the new OS, I think that the Nexus *must* be unlockable. It's the same reason why the Xoom is unlockable - it was the reference device for Honeycomb. So, if the next Nexus phone is Motorola, and it's on Verizon, it should also be unlockable.
Google Wallet is blocked becasue Verizon (+partners) spent $100Million (or something ridic) in a very similar banking product.
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Maybe, or perhaps it was because of this?: Google Wallet stores too much unencrypted data in a rooted device--report
doogald said:
Maybe, or perhaps it was because of this?: Google Wallet stores too much unencrypted data in a rooted device--report
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I wonder if they would consider that when they disallow rooting in the first place. More likely a play to insure that phone's stay locked to their network with their software. I can also see it from a support perspective but with custom roms available you change your first support step to "restore the original software, does it work now" and continue like normal from there.
http://www.talkandroid.com/68708-wh...roid+News,+Rumours,+and+Updates)#.TvvA9tRSTlk
After reading this article I think I will submit a complaint to the FCC. Worse case scenario I waste a little time. If enough people do this who knows.....
Interesting read. Sounds like they might not be able to stop you from tethering, too. Or wiping the bloat from your device. Am I reading too much into it?
I know the Bionic is 1st and last Moto device if HTC is unlocked and Moto remains locked.
good luck. i already submitted a complaint to the FCC about it a few months back(a long with a bunch of other people). all that ever happened was received a call from Verizon with some b.s. 'we'll be looking into the matter" and nothing ever happened. apparently, something to do with their "zoning" allows them to get away with it.
There was an article a while back which explained why Verizon could do it. The locked boot loader has NOTHING to do with "unlocked"(they are talking about the sum locking) in definition. Also the Boot loader falls under security which Verizon CAN prove an unlocked boot loader CAN cause a security concern towards their network would be allowed to block it.
I forget where I saw it. I believe I read it on Droid Life when they broke down the BLOCK C rules.
Sent from my Galaxy Nexus using Tapatalk
Tidbits said:
There was an article a while back which explained why Verizon could do it. The locked boot loader has NOTHING to do with "unlocked"(they are talking about the sum locking) in definition. Also the Boot loader falls under security which Verizon CAN prove an unlocked boot loader CAN cause a security concern towards their network would be allowed to block it.
I forget where I saw it. I believe I read it on Droid Life when they broke down the BLOCK C rules.
Sent from my Galaxy Nexus using Tapatalk
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How can you justify it is for security concerns when you ship other phones with unlocked boot loaders? HTC releases the unlock tools for their phones because they have become less dangerous all of a sudden?
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Nicelysedated said:
How can you justify it is for security concerns when you ship other phones with unlocked boot loaders? HTC releases the unlock tools for their phones because they have become less dangerous all of a sudden?
Sent from my DROID BIONIC using XDA App
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As I said If Verizon can prove it can have an adverse effect to the network they can block whatever they want. An unlocked boot loader for example could allow software beyond the means to hurt the network. If Verizon proves that then they can block it...
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http://www.bgr.com/2011/12/29/htc-offers-unlocking-option-for-all-recent-android-phones/
Htc has done this! Come on Moto!
gmpblack said:
http://www.bgr.com/2011/12/29/htc-offers-unlocking-option-for-all-recent-android-phones/
Htc has done this! Come on Moto!
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I know HTC just announced that they will unlock the thunderbolt too (http://www.droid-life.com/2011/12/3...-bootloader-unlock-treatment-from-htcdev-com/) if they can do it on an already released phone and a 4g phone for that matter then what is moto's problem
So it looks like the bootloader for Samsung's Galaxy SIII on Verizon is unlocked. What makes it possible for the S3, but not the Bionic? Does Motorola use a more complex system than Samsung? Or are the more devs working on the S3 than on the Bionic? Just curious, if someone more versed in this field knows the answer I'd love to know.
Cheers.
jetknife said:
So it looks like the bootloader for Samsung's Galaxy SIII on Verizon is unlocked. What makes it possible for the S3, but not the Bionic? Does Motorola use a more complex system than Samsung? Or are the more devs working on the S3 than on the Bionic? Just curious, if someone more versed in this field knows the answer I'd love to know.
Cheers.
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File used came from somewhere like an inside source at Samsung or something. Our bootloader is encrypted, locked, and not a popular device other than us idiots who had to have dual core 4g, lol. Not happening.
No one actually unlocked the GS3 bootloader. Someone managed to leak an engineering bootloader that doesn't do signature-checking. That's the extent of the unlocking that happened on the Galaxy S3. No one brute-forced it. No one patched it. No one reverse-engineered it. It's a bootloader replacement, not a bootloader crack.
Motorola has been putting out locked bootloaders for over two years now (starting with the Droid X). Dozens of extremely clever individuals have made attempts to break it, but to no avail. Even if you want to use the Atrix & Photon as examples of "unlocking" the bootloader, the process was the same on those devices as it is on the S3. They're leaks of unsecure versions of that devices bootloader.
Got it - thanks!
Well I did it again. I emailed moto tech support about boot loader unlocking. This time, Maureen tells me Motorola is in the process of unlocking Motorola devices and the list is growing. So one of these days the bionic may be on it.
Sent from my DROID BIONIC using xda app-developers app
The Moto devices that are developer's editions have a bootloader unlock option. The rest of us on consumer devices basically have no shot, particularly on Verizon. Maybe if we were on another carrier (eg. Verizon's GS3 is locked whereas the other carriers' GS3 is not).
I'd consider my odds of winning the lottery better than Moto finally unlocking the OMAP4430 siblings.
I FXZ'd my Bionic to 6.7.246 and then tried the fastboot oem get_unlock_data command on it, and the bootloader didn't understand the command, unfortunately.
I'm going to check again when the Bionic gets JB.
projektorboy said:
I'd consider my odds of winning the lottery better than Moto finally unlocking the OMAP4430 siblings.
I FXZ'd my Bionic to 6.7.246 and then tried the fastboot oem get_unlock_data command on it, and the bootloader didn't understand the command, unfortunately.
I'm going to check again when the Bionic gets JB.
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yeah i find it hard to believe they're just going to give us an open sourced version of the OEM... From what i understand from the first few months with my Bionic. The part we need is not software; if you look on the back of your bionic with the back cover off, you'll see a number of fuses. These are what separate developer phones from normal ones. We'd have to take it to Verizon to have them flash the unlock tool. So i hope this isn't just a partial unlock disguised as a software patch to allow a few more abilities with our bootloaders. This is just my understanding of reading 4 or 5 forums on bootloader unlocks and the problems people have run into. The fuses prevent certain areas from being flashed. This is just another part of my skepticism. not to mention MOT has not exactly been to their word anyways...
I agree with your final statement. maybe during the JB upgrade we'll see an unlock process. one can only hope.
i hope the devs support the droid turbo.
verizon locks down the droid tight.
With the nexus 6 also coming out it'll be a coin toss. Motorola has been cool about it since Google had it but now Lenovo takes over...
i think Sunshine V3.0 will work.. fingers crossed.
its so similar in hardware to nexus 6, time will tell.
Jaocagomez said:
its so similar in hardware to nexus 6, time will tell.
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I think the comparison would be to a moto X 2nd Gen. It's got more similar firmware.
Sent from my unlocked consumer edition Motorola Droid Maxx xt1080m.
Jaocagomez said:
its so similar in hardware to nexus 6, time will tell.
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It literally takes ONE TINY THING which has nothing to do with advertised specs to make the phone bullet proof, or at least impermeable by usual means.
http://forum.xda-developers.com/showpost.php?p=56172538&postcount=20
jmonroe0914 said:
If you're going to comment on a dev forum, at least understand the terminology before you use it... otherwise it makes you seem ignorant. "UNLOCKED" and "UNLOCKING THE BOOTLOADER" are two very different things that have ZERO to do with one another.
All LTE CDMA phones for the past 2 years that use a SIM are "unlocked", as this refers to the carrier lock that is placed on the device when it is sold in bulk to network providers (which is why you have three network settings in your phones setting menu - LTE, GSM, and Global). Don't use terminology you don't understand, as you're adding to the ignorance too many seem to have about what unlocking is and what unlocking a bootloader is. It makes it only that much harder for other individuals to get the correct information, and is the reason why a VZW rep tried to tell me I don't need a developer edition to unlock my phone, because all LTE devices are unlocked when I tried to explain I was looking for a developer edition so I could unlock the bootloader.
Very few Verizon phones have the capability to unlock the phone's bootloader, which allows for rooting without an exploit and the ability to flash custom ROMs (firmware), such as Cyanagenmod. Those of you believing root will appear on any new Motorola phones are not well versed in Motorola phones sold by Verizon. Dan Rosenberg, who is the person anyone with a Motorola device on Verizon has to to thank for the last half decade of being able to root your Motorola VZW phones, has repeatedly posted on numerous threads for over a year to not expect for your Motorola devices to be rooted and if you want root, either buy a Nexus or buy a Developer Edition (if VZW is going to release any more editions after the S5 is not known and information about Developer Editions for the Note 4 Droid Turbo have been repeatedly ignored by VZW's Public Affairs office). This is due to the fact VZW has wizened up and made finding an exploit on anything past 4.4.4 nigh impossible. Exploits that allow root access are not easy to find (taking several months for most VZW Moto root exploits) and as soon as one is found, within a matter of weeks, if not days, VZW will push an automatic update, forcing your phone to update to patch the exploit. This is why when you root your phone you're told to disable OTA updates at the apk level by freezing the update apk or removing it all together after making a backup of it.
Many Motorola users got a surprise in late Spring when a Moto employee "accidentally" included the exploited code that allowed you to blow the fuse and unlock the bootloader of devices running 4.4.2. That was a once in a billion opportunity that will probably never happen again. Every time an exploit has been found that allowed root access or the ability to unlock the bootloader (which was only recently cracked in the past year, possibly two... to put that in perspective, it took over half a decade for Dan Rosenberg to find the exploit that allowed the internal fuse to be blown, unlocking the bootloader). Exploits are not easy things to find, especially in Motorola devices running on VZW's network.
To all of those that like to post root bounties... BUY A DEVELOPER EDITION. You'll pay $300 for a device and then offer $300+ for a root bounty... which is the cost of developer edition device... considering VZW offers Edge, you no longer have to pay full retail in one go for a DE. From this point forward, VZW customers need to comprehend the fact that rooting will continue to be increasingly difficult to perform, most especially on Moto phones running on VZW's network. If you want root access, buy the S5 developer edition or wait until the first week of december to see if a developer edition for the Note 4 will be released (if a Note 4 DE is going to be released, it will occur within the 4 - 6 weeks following it's RTM on 10/23 [Thursday]).
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The answer is no, you will probably never see a root exploit for the Droid Turbo. The person above linked to one of my prior posts on a different thread, and it comes down to two fundamental facts... there is probably not going to be a DE of the Turbo because of the Nexus 6, and rooting a non-bootloader unlocked device once it's running Android 5.0 [Lollipop] and beyond is damn near impossible. The latter has to do withe SELinux and how Google locked down the partitions and permissions. ChainFire wrote two posts on Google+ that explain in great detail why those without unlocked bootloader can kiss rooting goodbye. It's not impossible, however it is highly improbable a root exploit will be found, in the same way it's possible the Earth could be hit today by a 5 mile wide asteroid, but it's highly improbable.
The new security features Google built into Android 5.0 is a double edged sword... on one hand they've finally addressed issues that, as of today, make Android the least secure OS on the market; however, the security that all of us most definitely want makes it highly unlikely a root exploit could be run on a non-bootloader unlocked device. The only reason it would work on an unlocked bootloader device is because a previous kernel could be flashed that would allow the exploit to run at bootup (flashing kernels is prevented by locked bootloaders).
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I hope so