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#<p>All innovation explores the limits of performance and behaviour.
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**Hacking** is just making hardware do something you know it is capable of doing. When the designers don't meet expectations--whether non-tech-related considerations motivate restrictions on permissible usage, or the designers simply fall short in the inspiration department--it is only natural to marshal one's D.I.Y. resources.

**Superuser should be one of those resources**. The contributors here are both helpful and knowledgeable. It's a powerful combination that should be allowed to foster creativity and encourage innovation. Collaboration isn't forced on anyone who isn't comfortable with the ethical foundations of a question--if you don't want to get involved, just don't answer the question.

**No country** allows its corporations to single-handedly impose statutory limits on its citizens--even when the corporation is as successful and respected as Apple. ***It is absurd*** to imagine that any arbitrary EULA might enjoy the force of law. 

 - *There is nothing illegal about asking questions that abjure a EULA--you cannot call it a "grey area" if there is no law to skirt*.
   
 - *There is nothing illegal about offering ideas on how one might subvert a EULA. Speculation isn't contravention--and neither one is
   illegal*.

**Any site that calls itself *Superuser*** has to allow a degree of freedom for forward-thinking.