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this post was submitted on 24 Aug 2024
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I wonder what counted as "an EU iPhone"?
The serial number? GPS location of the phone? IP address?
How could one outside of EU region to have an "EU iphone"?
An European iPhone, aka an iPhone which will get these features, is identified by a background process named
countryd
, introduced in iOS 16. Its only purpose is to compute and predict the most likely location of the user (as in country/region) and lock down features accordingly.These are only some of the factors taken into the equation:
countryd
takes in all of these and more as input to provide the most likely country of the user. If that country is in the EU, then 💥 Sideloading, Default Apps, etc etc etc goodiesIOW, not something that one stuck in Ameristan can realistically override. Damn.
A handful of those factors are fairly trivial, but addressing all of them concurrently sounds like a tall order - especially since presumably one can't talk to
countryd
directly and feed it the desired data.Appreciate the clarity - iOS just isn't a platform I have a need or the tools to code in.
I tried fooling it myself several times with the aim of getting satellite connectivity in my unsupported country, to no avail.
Used a German SIM card (where this feature is supported), went in my basement where there’s no cell service so that it can’t read MNC or MCC from any networks nor can it read GPS precisely (the circle spanned almost all of Western Europe, that imprecise I mean), used a Raspberry Pi as a router with country code as DE, disabled Wi-Fi, used VPN, used the Xcode debugging tools to simulate iPhone location to Germany (this usually fools all apps into thinking I’m in Germany, including Apple’s own Find My), all to no avail. And there’s no way to feed
countryd
any custom data.It’s insane.