I think it's not so much the rooting as it is rooting without tripping the Knox Counter and instantly voiding the warranty. Finding a root exploit that doesn't trip Knox is, indeed, like finding a needle in a haystack. But we have some very clever developers out there working on just such a needle
Rooting may void the warranty but I have talked to a t-mobile guy at a store and say u mess up your phone rooting or ur system crashes or what not. As I took it from what he said if there's no water damage and screens not broke they will give u a new one free is how I took it and he said on there check list they have it doesn't make them look to see if it's rooted or what ever
Rooting your phone is perfectly legal. However it voids your warranty. So root at your own risk as it were. Doesn't mean you can't legally resell or exchange a Knox tripped phone.
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