So, in other words, they're enforcing the policies that they've always had in place because the policies are being abused, after years of being lax about them? It seems like a perfectly legitimate thing to do, don't you think?
I was one of these people with a RAZR and T-MobileWeb service who'd hacked the Java Web sessions files to allow access to Opera Mini, but I knew all along (especially after explicitly asking customer support about it) that this was not the intended usage of the T-MobileWeb service. So now I have a Blackberry Pearl, pay the $20 (still a savings over Cingular or Verizon) and happily use many more mobile apps than I ever could on the RAZR.
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So, in other words, they're enforcing the policies that they've always had in place because the policies are being abused, after years of being lax about them? It seems like a perfectly legitimate thing to do, don't you think?
I was one of these people with a RAZR and T-MobileWeb service who'd hacked the Java Web sessions files to allow access to Opera Mini, but I knew all along (especially after explicitly asking customer support about it) that this was not the intended usage of the T-MobileWeb service. So now I have a Blackberry Pearl, pay the $20 (still a savings over Cingular or Verizon) and happily use many more mobile apps than I ever could on the RAZR.