In a genuine and everyday real sense, no, your likely thousand dollar device is not usable. The App Store requires an account to download from. Internal services and apps often complain about not being available. You are mostly stuck with whatever built in, non-cloud services the device comes with, which isn't much. Weather and mail fetching come to mind. Maybe some of the simple recording / note taking like apps. A working Apple ID is essentially a requirement to actually use the device you purchase. And yes there will be comments from folks about "ways" you can perhaps sideload or get things running, but to a regular person that simply uses a phone like a standard appliance in their life - they're stuck.
This is one of the reasons the used market for Apple devices is absolutely fraught with danger. If an Apple ID is left active on the device, only Apple can reset it. In most cases, they will only do that if they are provided the original purchase receipt for the serial number associated with the device. So in theory, removing the activation lock from owned devices is possible in a situation where a locked apple ID cannot be recovered if you are the original owner. IMO, there should be a process to release devices that haven't been used for a certain amount of time AND haven't been reported stolen. But there's very little incentive for Apple to do this.
If you read the other posts about this, the author explains that the phone technically still works, but you can't access iMessage or anything. Probably basic text and calls only.
The author did mention though that they were unable to log out of iCloud, as that requires to be logged in to iCloud. That would prevent reuse of the device with a different account.
Your iphone is tied to the old apple account and you can't untie it if you can't access the old account. (You can go through support with proof of purchase, but that requires you have proof of purchase at hand etc.)
In a genuine and everyday real sense, no, your likely thousand dollar device is not usable. The App Store requires an account to download from. Internal services and apps often complain about not being available. You are mostly stuck with whatever built in, non-cloud services the device comes with, which isn't much. Weather and mail fetching come to mind. Maybe some of the simple recording / note taking like apps. A working Apple ID is essentially a requirement to actually use the device you purchase. And yes there will be comments from folks about "ways" you can perhaps sideload or get things running, but to a regular person that simply uses a phone like a standard appliance in their life - they're stuck.
This is one of the reasons the used market for Apple devices is absolutely fraught with danger. If an Apple ID is left active on the device, only Apple can reset it. In most cases, they will only do that if they are provided the original purchase receipt for the serial number associated with the device. So in theory, removing the activation lock from owned devices is possible in a situation where a locked apple ID cannot be recovered if you are the original owner. IMO, there should be a process to release devices that haven't been used for a certain amount of time AND haven't been reported stolen. But there's very little incentive for Apple to do this.
If you read the other posts about this, the author explains that the phone technically still works, but you can't access iMessage or anything. Probably basic text and calls only.
The author did mention though that they were unable to log out of iCloud, as that requires to be logged in to iCloud. That would prevent reuse of the device with a different account.
Yes, you can continue to use anything that doesn’t require using Apple services.
So you could use your existing apps but not download new ones from the App Store.
You could use iMessage with some restrictions. You could use Apple Music but only the free radios. You could use Apple’s photos but would lose sync.
Usability depends on how much you rely on those services, but the device itself is still useable for other things.
This is a digital prison
Why can't you make a new one?
Your iphone is tied to the old apple account and you can't untie it if you can't access the old account. (You can go through support with proof of purchase, but that requires you have proof of purchase at hand etc.)
Now you've tied a new account to your old banned one, so you're evading a ban and your new account should get banned too.
It's against apple's ToS to avoid bans as such.
You forgot to add /s and the reference, because you come up as conceited, when you are being critic of previous Apple statements.
Not really. I have an iPad without an Apple account and you can’t do much with it.
That said, I choose to use it this way and it does everything I need it to.