Apple bricks phone if not serviced by Apple
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@Dashrender said:
@MattSpeller said:
@Dashrender said:
Considering the security implications - I've love to hear your solution for that considering a third party vendor with no Apple parts.
Easiest solution would be for Apple to sell parts officially and for a non-extortionate price. (ahahahahah!)
why don't you say that about their phones?
Say what about their phones? Sell them for cheap you mean? Oh honestly they can sell them for whatever they want, people will pay it. Just a real dick move to not have parts readily available for them.
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@MattSpeller said:
@Dashrender said:
@MattSpeller said:
@Dashrender said:
Considering the security implications - I've love to hear your solution for that considering a third party vendor with no Apple parts.
Easiest solution would be for Apple to sell parts officially and for a non-extortionate price. (ahahahahah!)
why don't you say that about their phones?
Say what about their phones? Sell them for cheap you mean? Oh honestly they can sell them for whatever they want, people will pay it. Just a real dick move to not have parts readily available for them.
Who said parts aren't available? Sure you might have to mail the phone away - I'm guessing most of those problem places also have to mail away laptops to get them fixed... so why should this be any different?
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@Dashrender said:
Who said parts aren't available? Sure you might have to mail the phone away - I'm guessing most of those problem places also have to mail away laptops to get them fixed... so why should this be any different?
available =/ cheap
available =/ easily obtained
Maybe I'm old fashioned but when I buy something of a certain quality (like Apple stuff) I expect that if it breaks I can get it repaired easily and it would be designed to allow this. I'm not even ragging on Apple at this point, all major phones are the same, many other things too. It bothers me, I despise our disposable culture.
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@MattSpeller said:
@Dashrender said:
Who said parts aren't available? Sure you might have to mail the phone away - I'm guessing most of those problem places also have to mail away laptops to get them fixed... so why should this be any different?
available =/ cheap
available =/ easily obtained
Maybe I'm old fashioned but when I buy something of a certain quality (like Apple stuff) I expect that if it breaks I can get it repaired easily and it would be designed to allow this. I'm not even ragging on Apple at this point, all major phones are the same, many other things too. It bothers me, I despise our disposable culture.
It's true. Having the ability to fix something like this is part of the quality. Just like support is a major part of the quality of a server. The QNAP hardware and features can be as cool as you like, but a 14 days SLA with "send us the hardware, we keep it for two weeks, wipe your data and send it back" policy means that the actual product isn't even fit for hobbyists.
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I can't speak to the 6s series with the force touch, but spent a short time around a repair shop and they didn't carry home buttons for the 5s/6/6+ with Touch ID because the buttons were paired to the boards like @Nic said. Tearing a home button flex cable would have meant buying a replacement phone. Not sure if the newest models have more limits than that.
Screen repairs mostly didn't have any other effect like this, but they would warn people of a chance that the Touch ID might not work after a screen repair. "We've personally read about it happening but never seen one," and continued with that line even after I saw one had happened there myself.
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http://ifixit.org/blog/7900/repair-error-53/
Interesting article from someone who runs a repair business...
But yeah, another line to add to the "reasons I hate Apple" list, it's quite big nowadays...and yes, I'm fairly sure this is illegal in the UK too...
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@NattNatt said:
http://ifixit.org/blog/7900/repair-error-53/
Interesting article from someone who runs a repair business...
But yeah, another line to add to the "reasons I hate Apple" list, it's quite big nowadays...and yes, I'm fairly sure this is illegal in the UK too...
I still don't think this was intentional to screw over little repair shops. I'm betting it was an oversite. The engineers said - hey we need a solution in case there is a break in the chain to make sure no one can install a shim between the reader and the security chip on the phone - if that chain is ever broken, let's just stop the phone from working - OK fine.
Of course those engineers didn't think that replacing the button would be a common thing needed to be done when the glass was replaced, so they just went the possible easy way - brick the phone.
Now they have to redesign that to not brick it... but hopefully just disable the print reader instead.
for pure security, I can't see them ever allowing a third party, non authorized apple repair shop to replace the print reader and keep the reader functional.
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@Dashrender said:
Of course those engineers didn't think that replacing the button would be a common thing needed to be done when the glass was replaced, so they just went the possible easy way - brick the phone.
That seems like an awful lot of assumption to assume Apple didn't think through. It's pretty common knowledge, I think, that those buttons get replaced a lot. Everyone I talk to seems to have had them replaced (if their phones got repaired.)
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@StrongBad said:
@Dashrender said:
Of course those engineers didn't think that replacing the button would be a common thing needed to be done when the glass was replaced, so they just went the possible easy way - brick the phone.
That seems like an awful lot of assumption to assume Apple didn't think through. It's pretty common knowledge, I think, that those buttons get replaced a lot. Everyone I talk to seems to have had them replaced (if their phones got repaired.)
Yeah, I'm erring on the side of "they knew what they were doing" when they did it...I severely disagree with many of apple's policies/tactics to try and get more sales, and fully believe this was intentional...means apple make money as they charge 3x the price for an "official" repair than a small business does...another reason I'll never buy/own an apple product...
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@Dashrender said:
Now they have to redesign that to not brick it... but
hopefullyjust disable the print reader instead.Arguably... shouldn't they have simply disabled the print reader to start with?
What about those of us who don't (won't) actually even use that feature?
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Yeah... it's a bit like "that doesn't seem to be the right key" so we are going to blow up your car.
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@dafyre said:
@Dashrender said:
Now they have to redesign that to not brick it... but
hopefullyjust disable the print reader instead.Arguably... shouldn't they have simply disabled the print reader to start with?
What about those of us who don't (won't) actually even use that feature?
That's what it was already doing BEFORE the update....
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@Dashrender said:
@NattNatt said:
http://ifixit.org/blog/7900/repair-error-53/
Interesting article from someone who runs a repair business...
But yeah, another line to add to the "reasons I hate Apple" list, it's quite big nowadays...and yes, I'm fairly sure this is illegal in the UK too...
I still don't think this was intentional to screw over little repair shops. I'm betting it was an oversite. The engineers said - hey we need a solution in case there is a break in the chain to make sure no one can install a shim between the reader and the security chip on the phone - if that chain is ever broken, let's just stop the phone from working - OK fine.
Of course those engineers didn't think that replacing the button would be a common thing needed to be done when the glass was replaced, so they just went the possible easy way - brick the phone.
Now they have to redesign that to not brick it... but hopefully just disable the print reader instead.
for pure security, I can't see them ever allowing a third party, non authorized apple repair shop to replace the print reader and keep the reader functional.
Everyone I know has had with an iPhone 6s has had to replace their button. Anecdotal evidence? Sure but it's what I have observed.
This is a money grab and an attempt at covering it up with "security".
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@NattNatt said:
That's what it was already doing BEFORE the update....
So the update wasn't for security at all and it's openly a scam? What extra security are they getting by bricking phones?
I mean, okay, a bricked phone IS more secure, obviously....
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@scottalanmiller said:
@NattNatt said:
That's what it was already doing BEFORE the update....
So the update wasn't for security at all and it's openly a scam? What extra security are they getting by bricking phones?
I mean, okay, a bricked phone IS more secure, obviously....
was gonna say... but yeah, that's what Jess says in the article I posted, as soon as a new home button is attached, it cancels apple pay and apple touch features...
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@NattNatt said:
@dafyre said:
@Dashrender said:
Now they have to redesign that to not brick it... but
hopefullyjust disable the print reader instead.Arguably... shouldn't they have simply disabled the print reader to start with?
What about those of us who don't (won't) actually even use that feature?
That's what it was already doing BEFORE the update....
Understanding that now, then yeah, I see this as just a money grab.
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Coincidence that this started RIGHT after they announced a drop in iPhone sales?
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The Australian Competition and Consumer Commission plans to query Apple on its practice of deliberately deactivating iPhones that have been repaired by non-Apple service providers.
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@nadnerB fingers crossed that that makes a difference.
That there has been such a public and legal backlash and Apple has not yet apologized or reverted the action suggests that Apple, even if it was a mistake originally and not thought through, is now doing it intentionally. What might (if you can even believe its possible) have started as Apple being clueless cannot be claimed any longer. Apple is now willing facing public outcry, government inquiry, potential legal threats and customers talking about leaving their most critical bastion of ecosystem stability over this issue and maintaining its stance in spite of all of that.... well, now it is a very different matter.
Every moment that Apple is not apologizing, isn't fixing the code they are telling their customers how little they think of them as customers and how little they think of ethics and of the law.
Anyone can make a mistake. As hard as this one is to believe. But their decisions now that they know the reaction to that decision are intentional and continuous.