Enabling this feature makes you the option to manually unlock your bootloader. To reiterate, this does not unlock your bootloader but allows you to manually unlock it via a tethered command prompt if you so choose.
So, let's say you enabled OEM UNLOCKING and then manually unlocked your bootloader using a tethered fast boot mode command line. So now that your bootloader is unlocked, what changes? Well as far as your Android OS goes, nothing changes. Unlocking the bootloader removes a layer of protection that allows your /boot, /recovery, /system, /modem & other partitions to be flashed. This is not rooting and not the same as rooting. Therefore, an unlocked bootloader does not alter your /system partition or your Android OS directly, as others have erroneously stated. But, you can now flash your device with a custom recovery which will allow you to install a custom ROM, a custom kernel or flash a root script to your stock Android OS, among many other things. Bootloader unlocking & rooting are two separate & distinct procedures and the two are not dependent on one another. In other words, you can fully root a device with a locked bootloader, just as you can have an unlocked bootloader and have a non-rooted device. Of course, to have full customization options, rooting and bootloader unlocking are preferred.
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