Apple May Need To Rethink 4G Claims (and Pay Refunds) In More Countries 105
redletterdave writes "After the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission (ACCC) won a battle with Apple after alleging the Cupertino-based company was misleading customers about its third-generation iPad, authorities in other countries are now assessing the compatibility of the new iPad with local 4G LTE networks to see if their customers should deserve refunds too. The UK's Advertising Standards Authority (ASA) confirmed on Tuesday that it is investigating complaints of Apple's misleading '4G' claim, while Sweden and Denmark are also reportedly considering investigations, after agencies within both countries received 'several complaints' from customers about 4G connectivity. Even though these countries carry broad LTE coverage, the new iPad isn't supported on any of those networks."
4G does not yet exist (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:4G does not yet exist (Score:4, Insightful)
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Re:4G does not yet exist (Score:5, Informative)
Faster theoretically maybe but not in reality, I've got a "4G" HSPA+ T-Mobile phone (which is the fastest of all the fake "4G" networks) and an AT&T LTE phone and where I can get an LTE signal it destroys the HSPA+ network. The fastest I've ever seen on the HSPA+ network was 5MB, the slowest LTE I;ve seen was 10MB.
In any case IMO the blame does indeed fall with the ITU, they set the "4G" barrier artificially high so that LTE let alone WiMax wouldn't get there, which invited the carriers to say fuck it and start slapping the "4G" label on their existing 3G networks. If the ITU had just said that LTE and WiMax were 4G we wouldn't have this problem.
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>>>HSPA+ network was 5MB, the slowest LTE I;ve seen was 10MB
It sucks that they cap these at just 5 and 10 megabytes respectively. That's worse than my 12GB cap on dialup.
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Not talking about data cap but data speeds, I rounded the numbers to the closest MB.
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Ahhh. What you did was equivalent to if I said the speed limit is 65 miles. Then it should be Mb/s (megabit per second). Or MB/s (megabyte per second).
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I routinely get something over 300 baud at my house (in plain sight of a tower). Calls just might go through. Bringing up a web page on the browser is an exercise in patience and battery capacity. Forget streaming anything except invective language.
I hate AT&T. Keep bragging and I might get to dislike you as well....
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Dunno, I've tried speed tests at various places in 4 different regions, Los Angeles County (where I live), San Diego, San Francisco Bay area and Las Vegas area and not gotten more than ~5.2MBPS even with 5 bars of HSPA+.
On the LTE phone it's rare I can pull an LTE signal and where it's stuck on HSPA+ it's quite a bit slower than the T-Mobile HSPA+ (usually 2-3 MBPS)
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is there a mobile network on the planet that is 4G compliant?
but to make everything nice and opaque
In March 2008, the International Telecommunications Union-Radio communications sector (ITU-R) specified a set of requirements for 4G standards, named the IMT-Advanced (International Mobile Telecommunications Advanced) specification, setting peak speed requirements for 4G service at 100 megabits per second (Mbit/s) for high mobility communication (such as from trains and cars) and 1 gigabit per second (Gbit/s) for low mobility communication (such as pedestrians and stationary users).[1]
Since the above mentioned first-release versions of Mobile WiMAX and LTE support much less than 1 Gbit/s peak bit rate, they are not fully IMT-Advanced compliant, but are often branded 4G by service providers. On December 6, 2010, ITU-R recognized that these two technologies, as well as other beyond-3G technologies that do not fulfill the IMT-Advanced requirements, could nevertheless be considered "4G", provided they represent forerunners to IMT-Advanced compliant versions and "a substantial level of improvement in performance and capabilities with respect to the initial third generation systems now deployed".[2]
from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/4G#Technical_definition [wikipedia.org]
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is there a mobile network on the planet that is 4G compliant?
The short answer is no. LTE Advanced and WiMax 2 will be but have not been implemented yet.
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HSPA+ provides an evolution of High Speed Packet Access and provides data rates up to 168 Megabits per second (Mbit/s) to the mobile device and 22 Mbit/s from the mobile device.
Re:4G does not yet exist (Score:5, Interesting)
Yeah, and it's highly annoying. If you want an LTE device (phone, stick, hotspot, whatever), you can't just look at 4G devices, because an annoyingly large number of them are really just HSPA+.
Now, technically Apple sells the iPad as 4G, with LTE support. But since the iPad also supports HSPA+, if other HSPA+ devices are sold as "4G" devices, Apple's in the clear as it's just LTE is not supported and following everyone else's convention of calling HSPA+ "4G".
Now if Apple sells it at 4G LTE, they're in trouble since the "LTE" part doesn't work.
Heck, maybe at the end it'll clarify "faux G" from real 4G.
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"But it really is 4G, because HSPA+ is called 4G too" doesn't work because neither Apple nor users really consider HSPA as 4G.
Seems like only LTE is marketed as 4G in Australia, for example.
And even Apple's own ad [apple.com] says:
And if you're in a location without a 4G LTE network, you'll still get access to fast 3G networks including HSPA, HSPA+, and DC-HSDPA.
Re:4G does not yet exist (Score:5, Informative)
Outside of the US, only LTE has been advertised as 4G. You can call it a translation blunder if you like, but Apple is really the first manufacturer to call a non-LTE device 4G in many countries. This is the backlash.
It's only 4G in America (Score:2)
The LTE modem doesn't work anywhere else in the world.
Then there's the whole DC-HSPA+ 4G "Faux-G" debate.
And, if you're on AT&T the new iPad will display 4G for HSPA+. Apple: fighting the corner of the users.
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our car can go 100mph! (Score:1, Interesting)
(reading the fine print..) "but you may not be able to drive at the maximum speed depending on the laws in your country"
"I cry foul! You promised me I could drive this car at 100mph! None of the roads in my area allow that speed! Liars! I want money!"
sad. Brain. You have one. Use it. I'm not your Captain Obvious [4closurefraud.org].
Re:our car can go 100mph! (Score:4, Interesting)
See how you sound?
The fact of the matter is the VALID metaphor would be selling a car claiming it will do 90mpg, only it only works on fuel that doesnt exist yet, which is essentially what Apple did.
Porsche vs Beetle (Score:3)
And a VW Beetle is faster than a Porsche [youtube.com] even when the Porsche is in excellent condition with a skilled driver behind the wheel. But if I bought a Beetle based only on it being "faster than a Porsche", and then discovered it wasn't, I'd be rather pissed off.
How is Apple's 4G chicanery any different?
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Well, if you advertise the car as a 100mph car, and OTHER cars don't have a problem driving 100mph, but your can't because the special fuel isn't available this side of the atlantic, I'd cry foul too.
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(reading the fine print..) "but you may not be able to drive at the maximum speed depending on the laws in your country"
"I cry foul! You promised me I could drive this car at 100mph! None of the roads in my area allow that speed! Liars! I want money!"
sad. Brain. You have one. Use it. I'm not your Captain Obvious [4closurefraud.org].
I'm not aware of any country that has a maximum speed limit, you can go as fast as you like on any private race track and anyone can purchase track time at a local track.
It's not as if the car can drive 100mph on USA pavement but not Australian pavement meaning that it will never be able to go 100mph anywhere but the USA You're even able to drive 100mph on a public road if you want to (at the risk of prosecution, but that's not a limitation of the car).
Is there any chance that someone in Australia can pu
Re:our car can go 100mph! (Score:5, Insightful)
If you advertise a device as "4G-LTE" compatible without qualification, and it not compatible with 4G-LTE in that country (where you are advertising it as 4G-LTE compatible), that is misleading advertisment.
The car analogy would actually be saying "This car can go 100mph!" when it can only go 100mph if you drive it down a hill. Technically correct, but not actually an applicable statement in most situations where you actually drive the car, and therefore misleading advertising.
And yes, advertising is often misleading (that is a fair amount of the point of advertising), but to advertise a device so that it looks like it has worldwide 4G capability (which they did) when it does not (which it doesn't) is false advertising.
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Yeah, if only Apple had advertised it without qualification.
But they didn't:
http://www.apple.com/ipad/4g/ [apple.com]
"The new iPad supports fast cellular networks around the world — including 4G LTE networks in the U.S. and Canada.*"
"*4G LTE is supported only on AT&T and Verizon networks in the U.S. and on Bell, Rogers, and Telus networks in Canada. Data plans sold separately. See your carrier for details."
Hence this whole claim is BS.
Advertising is advertising, but they explicitly said, in descriptive text A
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You're looking at US site.
At current version of Australian [apple.com] site, for example, "US and Canada" part is only in fine print - though no mentions of 4G except for page url and name, only "fast wireless" (don't remember if it was that way before or did they change the page since yesterday).
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At first (i.e. for the first half of release day), the Australian site was loudly proclaiming "4G!!!!" in large font in the headings. That's the problem. They rapidly changed it once they realised they were going to get in trouble, but the site you're seeing now is quite different than how it appeared on launch day.
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Exactly right.
Just because someone misreads that does NOT mean that Apple was promising anything other than "fast" cellular networks.
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Apple apologists are funny like that, "Apple's infallible, the world is wrong".
Customer protection in .au and .dk are already looking at this "misreading" closely, .se, .uk and .de are discussing this as well.
Greatest of all, yesterday's discussion about Australia even has a few comments to the effect of "You're holding it wrong^W^W^W^WWell, you'd better install cell towers compatible with iPad next time!"
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Way to reinforce my point. People like you are the reason Apple community is perceived as mindless religious zealots.
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Try looking at the Australian version of that page: http://www.apple.com/au/ipad/4g/ [apple.com] Sure it does mention that 4G works only in the US, only in fine print, and not where it talks about the 4G features themselves. I also don't know if that was a recent addition or if it said that at launch. The page also states "iPad with Wi-Fi + 4G models connect to GSM/UMTS networks worldwide" and there is no mention there that 4G functionality only works in the US/Canada. You could also argue that "4G LTE" isn't specific
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On that page, the first paragraph says this:
"The new iPad supports fast mobile networks around the world, including HSPA, HSPA+, and DC-HSDPA.* So you can download content, stream video and browse the web at amazing speeds."
The footnote says this:
"*4G LTE is supported only on AT&T and Verizon networks in the US; and on Bell, Rogers and Telus networks in Canada. Data plans sold separately. See your carrier for details."
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As far as the general public us concerned, HSPA, HSPA+, DC-HSDPA is just meaningless nonsense. And they won't know what "4G LTE" is in comparison to just "4G". All the average person will read from that page is that the iPad supports 4G. It is in the heading. It is in the URL.
As far as the ACCC is concerned, an advertisement can be 100% accurate and still be deemed to be misleading. You should not have to read footnotes to find that the main, prominent claim is a lie.
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It looks like they updated the page. It now says this in two other places:
"This product supports very fast cellular networks. It is not compatible with current Australian 4G LTE networks and WiMAX networks."
Current spec page:
http://www.apple.com/au/ipad/specs/ [apple.com]
Google cache of the page without the message:
http://webcache.googleusercontent.com/search?sourceid=navclient-ff&ie=UTF-8&q=cache%3Ahttp%3A%2F%2Fwww.apple.com%2Fau%2Fipad%2Fspecs%2F [googleusercontent.com]
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Will make you rich!*
*Will actually bankrupt you.
Merely adding a star to a misleading statement doesn't make it not misleading.
Look at the actual adverts... (Score:1)
BTW. You can get a refund in Australia if you return the device. So you won't get any money back if you keep it. Basically Apple says "we are accused of misleading you. If you feel misled, then you can return the iPad
Re:Look at the actual adverts... (Score:5, Informative)
http://www.apple.com/uk/ipad/
Ultra-fast 4G. Full speed ahead.
Designed with next-generation wireless technology, the new iPad with Wi-Fi + 4G connects to fast data networks around the world.
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http://www.apple.com/uk/ipad/
Ultra-fast 4G. Full speed ahead.
Designed with next-generation wireless technology, the new iPad with Wi-Fi + 4G connects to fast data networks around the world.*
* Only in America. Fixed that for them.
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That sort of fix sounds like one that "only works in America" too. EU has specific laws that forbid this kind of bait and switch in small print, and Apple has clearly ran afoul of these laws in its marketing.
Re:Look at the actual adverts... (Score:5, Informative)
Yeah, that is misleading - even if it dose say at the bottom:
It implies that 4G will work "around the world", yet it only works in the US and Canada... not even the UK market where this is advertised. The Australian page has the exact same copy.
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Yes, maybe at some point in the future it will work around the world. Currently, the only places it will work on "4G" are the US and Canada.
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Except that the LTE frequencies the ipad supports are already occupied in the UK by freeview; our over-the-air digital TV network that is pretty much rolled out country wide now, and is the way the vast majority of people watch TV. The odds of those frequencies being available for use in the UK for LTE wireless are... slim, to say the least. IIRC, general-use LTE spectrum is earmarked to be taken from the current analog TV bands, once the last transmitters are switched off - the auctions are scheduled for 2
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The product is called "iPad with Wi-Fi + 4G", and it will connect to fast data networks around the world. Is 3G fast?
It is a terrible shame that "LTE" doesn't describe a data network around the world. Are there any products that can roam worldwide on LTE?
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If you think that I'll be happy to sell you a car. It will naturally work around the world but you'll need to find a fuel station that offers an unobtainium catalyst to use it.
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I'm quite literate and I find this literature misleading. Just because it is technically correct does not make it any less misleading. I like Apple and their products, but I don't like ads like this.
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Does someone sell tickets to that in Australia?
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>>>Ultra-fast 4G. Full speed ahead..... the new iPad with Wi-Fi + 4G connects to fast data networks around the world.
Except 4G only works in North america. I didn't realize the U.S. and Canada were now considered "the world". Wow. Did the Congress bomb everyone else into oblivion?
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I should have added "Stupid advertisers" to this post. I was criticizing them.
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I didn't realize the U.S. and Canada were now considered "the world". Wow.
I take it you're not a baseball fan...
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ANNNDD... it's now been reworded. Hope someone had a copy of the original page.
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You think that's bad? This Australian specific page [apple.com] on the Apple website makes me think straight away that Optus Virgin and Telstra are the phone companies that I need to talk to in order to get the full benefits of the iPad.
Telstra's 4G network doesn't work on the frequency used by the iPad, and the other two companies don't even offer 4G, not even HSPA+.
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But in the ads (Score:1)
Re:But in the ads (Score:5, Informative)
It specifically says which LTE networks are supported. Is the new standard for ads now to be that only the largest print claims count?
If they sell their iPad in $country saying it 'supports LTE' than yes, as a customer I expect to be able to use LTE in THAT COUNTRY. Putting in the fine print 'only if your in the US or Canada' is misleading advertisement.
That may not be a problem in the US, but in other parts of the world, especially in Europe, ads are expected to be truthful and not misleading. Trying to wiggle out by using the fine print to basically negate the statments you make in big letters may run afoul to consumer protection.
And I still wonder: Why did Apple use a chipset that only supports the LTE frequencies used in the US and Canada? There are chipsets that support the other frequencies.
Would it have been to expensive to build two or three different models for different markets? Would it have been to expensive to use a chipset that supports all frequencies (assuming such a beast exists)?
Or is it just once again the America-centric world view that Apple (and other companies) have shown more than once in the past?
America-centric world view (Score:2)
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You have a lot to learn about how consumer protection laws work over here. Yes, you can't claim one thing in the largest letters in the ads if the consumer can't reasonably expect it to be true. However, the reporting is a bit overblown as they're only thinking about starting an investigation. Quoting the Swedish Consumer Agency (my own error-prone translation of a MacWorld article at http://macworld.idg.se/2.1038/1.440631/konsumentverket-granskar-apple [macworld.idg.se]):
"- This is probably something we have to look into,
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>>> Is the new standard for ads now to be that only the largest print claims count?
That's why ISPs are getting sued for claiming "unlimited" internet, even if the 1-point-size print clarifies that it is only 5 gigabytes.
BTW Sony got in trouble in the EU for advertising PS3s as supporting "other OSes" like Linux and then turning-off that feature. They had to refund money to customers, even if the purchase had occurred two years earlier. You don't false-advertise in the EU and get away with it.
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It specifically says which LTE networks are supported. Is the new standard for ads now to be that only the largest print claims count?
Yes. In much or Europe that's been the standard for a while. These cases aren't tried in court where the standard is "can a lawyer prove that the ad is technically correct" but are investigated by industry regulators such as the ASA in the UK, where:
So they may also take into account what the typi
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Is the new standard for ads now to be that only the largest print claims count?
No. The standard isn't new. This is what you get when you have a consumer watchdog that actually makes sure the little folk don't get shafted. It's also why you won't see an advertisement for "Unlimited* Broadband" in Australia.
You don't need fineprint. It's not like Apple America wrote the Australian adverts. There are country specific ads, and country specific websites. Don't support 4G here because the radio in the device doesn't use our frequency bands? Don't advertise it as WiFi+4G.
It really is that si
They need to rethink 4G claims in the USA, too (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:They need to rethink 4G claims in the USA, too (Score:5, Informative)
Funny story: When the iPad on AT&T displays "4G", it's connecting to HSDPA or HSPA+. When it shows "LTE", it's connecting to 4G LTE.
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A battle? (Score:1)
That's a bit of an overdramatic description don't you think? Trying to spin legal arguments to sound more interesting? It reminds of Keanu Reeves fighting the Devil in the Devil's Advocate, that was a battle!
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My thoughts also. The ACCC don't need to 'battle' with corporations. They make a ruling, and that's it.
Same situation in Finland (Score:2)
Speaking of which (Score:3)
As a Sprint customer living in Raleigh NC I can attest that for the most part their claims of 3G let alone 4G are a farce. Data network coverage is spotty down to the individual home on the individual street. If you move literally 50 ft your coverage drops out. Speed tests regularly show 1kpbs down and 0.1 kbps up. But since Sprint charges you $10/month for every phone which CAN access 4G whether it actually does or even whether Sprint offers the service where the phone is used, this is how they get around the 'unlimited no caps' issue that the other carriers have. They simply charge everyone for what does not exist and this makes up for the bandwidth hogs.
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If their were 'truth in advertising' required for the signal strength meter, most of the AT&T network would be stuck at "1200 baud".
The situation is Sweden (Score:1)
I'm happy that we are looking into this. Thing is, Sweden actually has the oldest LTE network in the world, so if an ad mentions LTE at all, obviously we would assume that we could use it, but the new iPad doesn't work on our network is because it uses different frequencies from the US network.
Not even close to 4g (Score:2, Informative)
I have AT&T in the DC Metro area here with "4g" (HSPA+).
It's pretty rare that I can even break 1mbps, let alone the theoretical max of 14mbps. The very best I've seen is around 5mbps and that was in one very rare instance.
Seriously until they can get at least near LTE speeds which are close to broadband, it's pretty ridiculous for them to claim they've leapt forward a generation.
It's not "Pay" refunds... (Score:2, Insightful)
...it's "Offer" refunds.
Sure, you can give Apple back the iPad, and they'll give you your money back.
It's not like Apple will have trouble selling that iPad, and now you don't have one anymore.
Winners everyone on this one, eh?
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Surely, you mean "pre-worshipped".
At LAST a little sanity (Score:2)
And nobody (with a voice) thought that was a bad thing.
Suddenly companies are discovering that insert weasel words here is insufficient protection from lawsuits and punitive damages.
It's about time!
For the life of me I do not understand why "if you cannot deliver said functionality in a given country, then YOU CANNOT MARKET UNDER SAID TECHNOLOGY BANNER (in said country)" is su