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      unlocking

      Court Allows Lawsuit Against T-Mobile To Proceed

      By Chris Walters, 3:18 PM on Thu Oct 11 2007, 3,750 views

      con_giantt-mobilechainedtre.jpg On Wednesday, the California Supreme Court refused to review two earlier findings, which killed T-Mobile's final chance at blocking a lawsuit against its early-termination fees and practice of locking phones. This is the third time T-Mobile has tried to stop the case from proceeding, and both a state trial judge and a state appeals court have already rejected T-Mobile's claims that its customers were required by the terms of their contracts to submit to binding arbitration.

      In June, the state appeals court said T-Mobile's contractual prohibition of class-action lawsuits was "unconscionable," which "rendered the arbitration provision unenforceable."

      If the plaintiffs win, "the outcome could require cell phone carriers, at least in California, to unlock cell phones upon a customer's request." It could also have an impact on two class-action lawsuits that were filed last week in California against Apple and AT&T over their practice of locking the iPhone to a single network, and of possibly bricking rogue phones deliberately.

      "Court Clears Way for Mobile-Phone-Unlocking Lawsuit Against T-Mobile" [Wired]
      (Photo: Getty)

      Read More: unlocking, Lawsuits, Sim, binding arbitration, Class-Action, Consumer Rights, customer rebellion, Fees, Mobile Phones, T-Mobile, Telecommunications, termination

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