aryayush
Aspiring Novelist
The practice of unlocking phones is not illegal in India (and in most other parts of the world too). 
Thankfully, the hackers happen to be rather skilled at what they do and therefore, the risks are at a minimum and it is quite possible to use the iPhone in India and have it perform stably.
I, however, didn't buy the iPhone unofficially because I wanted stable performance. I don't even have much use for a mobile phone. I bought the phone primarily because I wanted to be on the cutting edge. Even when I was buying it, I was not only prepared but was actually looking forward to restoring, unlocking and jailbreaking it myself. I wanted to try out the latest beta firmwares from Apple before everyone else gets to have a chance to use them, install the best applications, etc.
My iPhone didn't crap out due to some problem with the phone. The problem was with one of the many unsupported beta applications I had installed. I was prepared for that eventuality and that won't stop me have a go at it again. Last time, I jailbroke and unlocked it using a less than ideal method. This time, I'm using the best one available.
This is fun for a geek (by a layman's definition) like me.
Having to maintain the upkeep of a legally purchased, publicly available and supported operating system from the largest software company in the world and tolerate its frequent crashes and error-proneness is not fun at all. If Mac OS X completely crashed on me someday and I had to reinstall the whole thing, you won't find me declaring that fun at all. In fact, I was pretty miffed at Apple yesterday when the official solution for a little problem I had was to reboot Mac OS X and declared it quite publicly on Twitter. It's pretty much a routine solution on Windows and no one even notices it when they're told to restart Windows because no icons would show up on their desktop or Internet Explorer won't open any webpage.
I may not be an ideal person, but I think I know how to differentiate right from wrong and I hope the difference is clear to you as well now.
You miss one crucial point, my dear friend: the iPhone is neither officially available nor supported in India. It is locked to an American carrier and has to be unlocked using completely unsupported procedures put into place by unauthorised hackers using unofficial tools to make it work in India.Fun? Having a device crash, get stuck in a rebooting loop, and having to redo everything you did is fun?
Funny how it doesn't seem like fun when it happens on Windows..... no, no... there it is an irrevocably obvious sign of how sucky Windows is.
If the iPhone crashes, you suddenly burst my bubble.
Thankfully, the hackers happen to be rather skilled at what they do and therefore, the risks are at a minimum and it is quite possible to use the iPhone in India and have it perform stably.
I, however, didn't buy the iPhone unofficially because I wanted stable performance. I don't even have much use for a mobile phone. I bought the phone primarily because I wanted to be on the cutting edge. Even when I was buying it, I was not only prepared but was actually looking forward to restoring, unlocking and jailbreaking it myself. I wanted to try out the latest beta firmwares from Apple before everyone else gets to have a chance to use them, install the best applications, etc.
My iPhone didn't crap out due to some problem with the phone. The problem was with one of the many unsupported beta applications I had installed. I was prepared for that eventuality and that won't stop me have a go at it again. Last time, I jailbroke and unlocked it using a less than ideal method. This time, I'm using the best one available.
This is fun for a geek (by a layman's definition) like me.
Having to maintain the upkeep of a legally purchased, publicly available and supported operating system from the largest software company in the world and tolerate its frequent crashes and error-proneness is not fun at all. If Mac OS X completely crashed on me someday and I had to reinstall the whole thing, you won't find me declaring that fun at all. In fact, I was pretty miffed at Apple yesterday when the official solution for a little problem I had was to reboot Mac OS X and declared it quite publicly on Twitter. It's pretty much a routine solution on Windows and no one even notices it when they're told to restart Windows because no icons would show up on their desktop or Internet Explorer won't open any webpage.
I may not be an ideal person, but I think I know how to differentiate right from wrong and I hope the difference is clear to you as well now.