It's now legal to jailbreak your iPhone
In addition to jailbreaking, other exemptions announced Monday would:
-- allow owners of used cell phones to break access controls on their phones in order to switch wireless carriers.
-- allow people to break technical protections on video games to investigate or correct security flaws.
-- allow college professors, film students and documentary filmmakers to break copy-protection measures on DVDs so they can embed clips for educational purposes, criticism, commentary and noncommercial videos.
-- allow computer owners to bypass the need for external security devices called dongles if the dongle no longer works and cannot be replaced.
-- allow blind people to break locks on electronic books so that they can use them with read-aloud software and similar aides.