Post: Why I think the iPhone 5 rumors are all fake
09-03-2012, 06:20 AM #1
xShadow
Pr0n ftw
(adsbygoogle = window.adsbygoogle || []).push({}); First of all, lets remember what happened when someone leaked the iPhone 4 MONTHS before release date:

Originally posted by another user


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The Gourmet Haus Staudt. A nice place to enjoy good German lagers. And if you are an Apple Software Engineer named Gray Powell, it's also a nice place to lose the iPhone 4 prototype.

Gray Powell—a North Carolina State University 2006 graduate and talented amateur photographer—is an Apple Software Engineer working on the iPhone Baseband Software, the little program that enables the iPhone to make calls. A dream job for a talented engineer like Powell, an Apple fan who always wanted to meet Steve Jobs.

On the night of March 18, he was enjoying the fine imported ales at Gourmet Haus Staudt, a nice German beer garden in Redwood City, California. He was happy. After all, it was his birthday. He was turning 27 that very same day, and he was celebrating.

The place was great. The beer was excellent. "I underestimated how good German beer is," he typed into the next-generation iPhone 4 he was testing on the field, cleverly disguised as an iPhone 3GS. It was his last Facebook update from the secret iPhone. It was the last time he ever saw the phone, right before he abandoned it on bar stool, leaving to go home. [img] https://cache.gawkerassets.com/assets/images/4/2011/11/67d8d7271e3f694ef837209c15b44c02.jpg[/img] It a simple mistake in the middle of celebration. Something that anyone, from Steve Jobs to Jonathan Ive, could have done. Knowing how ferocious and ruthless Apple is about product leaks, those beers may have turned out to be the bitterest of his life. (Almost) Impenetrable Security
Until now, Apple's legendary security has always worked perfectly. Perhaps there was a blurry factory photo here, or some last-minute information strategically whispered to some friendly media there. But when it comes to the big stuff, everything is airtight. At their Cupertino campus, any gadget or computer that is worth protecting is behind armored doors, with security locks with codes that change every few minutes. Prototypes are bolted to desks. Hidden in these labs, hardware, software and industrial-design elves toil separately on the same devices, without really having the complete picture of the final product.

And hidden in every corner, the Apple secret police, a team of people with a single mission: To make sure nobody speaks. And if there's a leak, hunt down the traitor, and escort him out of the building. Using lockdowns and other fear tactics, these men in black are the last line of defense against any sneaky eyes. The Gran Jefe Steve trusts them to avoid Apple's worst nightmare: The leak of a strategic product that could cost them millions of dollars in free marketing promotion. One that would make them lose control of the product news cycle.

But the fact is that there's no perfect security. Not when humans are involved. Humans that can lose things. You know, like the next generation iPhone 4. Lost and Found
Apple security's mighty walls fell on the midnight of Thursday, March 18. At that time, Powell was at Gourmet Haus Staudt, just 20 miles from the company's Infinite Loop headquarters, having his fun. Around him, other groups of people were sharing the jolly atmosphere, and plenty of the golden liquid.

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The person who eventually ended up with the lost iPhone was sitting next to Powell. He was drinking with a friend too. He noticed Powell on the stool next to him but didn't think twice about him at the time. Not until Powell had already left the bar, and a random really drunk guy—who'd been sitting on the other side of Powell—returned from the bathroom to his own stool.

The Random Really Drunk Guy pointed at the disguised iPhone 4 sitting on the stool, the precious prototype left by the young Apple engineer.

"Hey man, is that your iPhone?" asked Random Really Drunk Guy.

"Hmmm, what?" replied the person who ended up with the iPhone. "No, no, it isn't mine."

"Ooooh, I guess it's your friend's then," referring to a friend who at the time was in the bathroom. "Here, take it," said the Random Really Drunk Guy, handing it to him. "You don't want to lose it." After that, the Random Really Drunk Guy also left the bar.

The person who ended up with the iPhone asked around, but nobody claimed it. He thought about that young guy sitting next to him, so he and his friend stayed there for some time, waiting. Powell never came back.

During that time, he played with it. It seemed like a normal iPhone. "I thought it was just an iPhone 3GS," he told me in a telephone interview. "It just looked like one. I tried the camera, but it crashed three times." The iPhone didn't seem to have any special features, just two bar codes stuck on its back: 8800601pex1 and N90_DVT_GE4X_0493. Next to the volume keys there was another sticker: iPhone SWE-L200221. Apart from that, just six pages of applications. One of them was Facebook. And there, on the Facebook screen, was the Apple engineer, Gray Powell.

[img]https://cache.gawkerassets.com/assets/images/4/2011/11/965c1941cf2f758002355451936d3741.jpg [/img]

Thinking about returning the phone the next day, he left. When he woke up after the hazy night, the phone was dead. Bricked remotely, through MobileMe, the service Apple provides to track and wipe out lost iPhones. It was only then that he realized that there was something strange that iPhone. The exterior didn't feel right and there was a camera on the front. After tinkering with it, he managed to open the fake 3GS.

There it was, a shiny thing, completely different from everything that came before.

He reached for a phone and called a lot of Apple numbers and tried to find someone who was at least willing to transfer his call to the right person, but no luck. No one took him seriously and all he got for his troubles was a ticket number.

He thought that eventually the ticket would move up high enough and that he would receive a call back, but his phone never rang. What should he be expected to do then? Walk into an Apple store and give the shiny, new device to a 20-year-old who might just end up selling it on eBay?


TL ; DR? Okay, so an apple worker who was a technician at apple got drunk and lost his iPhone 4 prototype in a bar during his birthday, luckily or unwisely the person who stole it made a video and uploaded it to youtube showing off the "shiny thing", here's the video:



What happened to the person who stole it? His house got raid and he got arrested.

So now that we get that part, lets get to the details, and I won't really have to explain much, iResq, a company that is partnered with apple has been claiming to have access to parts and have leaked them all over their website, the parts and/or look of the phone are the same that is being rumored to be the next gen iphone, following more rumors that it will be released september 12th.
Here's a video of hands on the claimed to be iPhone 5:



This is obviously fake as in every single video, the iPhone has a different font, it never turns on, nobody likes the back metal part, the original iPhone 4 back looks more gorgeous, the new headphone jack and all is a joke, plus why would apple change the dock connector size when people have bought expensive items for the iDevices that use the current dock connector?

If iResq is in partnership with apple, they would have gotten shut down or sued a long time ago for leaking their product, such a leak would cost them a lot of money and it would be a major loss for apple, and if any of it was real, we would be hearing about lawsuits and raids, why do you think that a company like apple wouldn't do anything about it when they did something about it the last time?

Conclusion: Apple is paying companies that supply them with parts to make us believe that it is the final product, this is to surprise us when the big event comes.
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The following user thanked xShadow for this useful post:

Darth Saul
09-03-2012, 05:37 PM #2
iixHD
Haxor!
I agree 100%. It's a smart move by apple IMO.
09-03-2012, 05:46 PM #3
Pixie Lott
Keep it MeLLo
tbh if Apple did do that then that would be the best idea ever, But yea leaks happen all the time
09-03-2012, 06:14 PM #4
xShadow
Pr0n ftw
Originally posted by Pixie
tbh if Apple did do that then that would be the best idea ever, But yea leaks happen all the time


Again if leaks were real apple would have taken action against iresq, ibreakufix, and the rest of the iwebsites' that fix or repair apple items would have been taken down, lets not forget that apple has doubled down security, and even if it was real it wouldn't further than just a few parts, lets not forget that apple has managed to sue $1 Billion out of samsung not too long ago too, samsung with little or no hope for appeal. That's how serious they are with their devices, and all those fake prototypes are just evidence that they are fooling us. If it it was only one leak it would be considered a simple prototype, nothing different from the rest, but if it is more than one people believe that is the final thing, and apple is too powerful, specially over their suppliers to allow this to continue.
09-03-2012, 06:23 PM #5
Reaper X
Bounty hunter
I hope you're right, because I hated the "new Iphone" design.
09-03-2012, 07:57 PM #6
3HUNNA
Splicer
The leaks happen every year people get the new look for the iPhone and thats it. Yes the prototypes are fake but it could be based off the real design. All it takes is one source from apple to say the new iPhone is 4 inchs, maybe even a sketch of it.
09-03-2012, 09:22 PM #7
xShadow
Pr0n ftw
Originally posted by ENT View Post
The leaks happen every year people get the new look for the iPhone and thats it. Yes the prototypes are fake but it could be based off the real design. All it takes is one source from apple to say the new iPhone is 4 inchs, maybe even a sketch of it.


Again apple would never allow it to go further than just a few minor leaks... This is as fake as every other prototype.
09-03-2012, 09:25 PM #8
3HUNNA
Splicer
Originally posted by xShadow
Again apple would never allow it to go further than just a few minor leaks... This is as fake as every other prototype.


Exactly what i'm saying.

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