An unopened first-generation iPhone from 2007 has gone under auction and is expected to fetch more than $50,000 (£40,000).
Karen Green was given the phone as a gift by friends after getting a new job but she never broke the seal and opened it up as she already had a mobile and would have had to pay a fee to change networks, it is reported.
The phone was on sale in 2007 for $599 and the first iPhone offered a 3.5-inch screen with a 2 megapixel camera and 8GB of storage.
She made an a television appearance in 2019 where the phone was valued at the time at $5,000 but since then its price has risen considerably.
It was last October when another unopened first-generation iPhone went for more than $39,000 at an auction that Karen thought it might be the time to sell even though she realises that the price will continue to grow for it.
Millions blocked from iconic iPhone app forever after 10 years in major shutdownBut having just opened up her own cosmetic tattoo studio in New Jersey she wants the money now.
"If I could hold off on the phone for like another 10 years, I probably would," she told Business Insider. "The only reason why I am selling that phone is because I need to support this business."
She approached LCG auctions who also did the sale for last October’s first generation phone.
“We got calls from everybody but 99% of them didn’t have the same thing,” LCG Auctions founder, Mark Montero reportedly said. “But Karen had a really unique piece with a great story behind it.”
He added: “It was shocking because we had gotten so many duds.”
The phone was put on auction on Thursday and will end on February 19 with an expected price of $50,000 upwards.
Steve Jobs, at Apple’s annual Macworld expo in 2007, said: “We’re going to make some history together today.”
The late former Apple boss said the new smartphone was a “revolutionary mobile phone” that will feature an iPod, phone and what he described as an “Internet communicator.”