Bricked iPhones With 'Error 53' Just Cost Apple $6.7 Million in Australia (betanews.com) 118
Apple has been hit with an AUS $9 million ($6.7 million) fine for misleading customers in Australia. More than two years ago Apple started to "brick" iPhones that had been fixed at non-authorized third-party repairers, generating an Error 53. From a report: Apple admitted to intentionally preventing certain repaired iPhones and iPads from working for security reasons, but later apologized and issued a fix. However, the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission (ACCC) sued Apple for "misleading or deceptive conduct," and now an Australian court has hit the iPhone-maker with a multi-million dollar fine.
Not "Bricked" (Score:4, Insightful)
I don't think you understand "bricked".
When something is "bricked", it can then do anything a brick can, and nothing the bricks can't.
Bricks can't be given a "fix" that turns them into a smartphone.
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So anything that's temporarily not operational is now "soft-bricked"?
Yes.
Please try to keep up: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]
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The term "bricked" usually means "broken to the extent that the device owner cannot fix it themselves"...
Clearly anything can be repaired given the skills, tools and parts, something may be in a state that it could be fixed but the owner is not aware how and it requires someone else to provide information or updated software in order to do so.
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So anything that's temporarily not operational is now "soft-bricked"?
Bob Dylan said that slang changes so fast, people in the future won't even be able to understand it! Although I do understand over 90% of Subterranean Homesick Blues. But kids who grew up on the other side of the tracks already might not.
Don't worry, there is no requirement or expectation that you keep up with modern language. Let the whippersnappers make their noise, even if it sounds like they're worshiping the devil and getting married to a holiday resort; don't worry Gramps, it's just the new words, tha
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I would say something smarter, but my phone is dead.
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Start attending your cognitive therapy sessions again.
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If you need to add a qualifier to a binary classifier, you're just creating a useless term.
Outside of programming languages and math formulas, creating a useless term is not a mistake, problem, error, or in any way incorrect. Useless terms are perfectly cromulent, and it is up to the reader to find value or not.
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The word "brick", when used in reference to consumer electronics, describes an electronic device such as a smartphone, game console, router, or tablet computer that, due to severe physical damage, a serious misconfiguration, corrupted firmware, or a hardware problem, can no longer function, hence, is as technologically useful as a brick.[1]
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brick_(electronics)
If Apple was able to issue a patch to fix the phones then it was in fact not bricked in the first place.
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Bricking is relative. The phones were bricked in the sense that there was no action available to the owner to make the phone useful again. Only Apple could fix it.
Many things called bricked are technically recoverable by soldering a JTAG connector in and such, but are still considered bricked since there is no supported interface that may be used to recover functionality.
The Wikipedia article you pointed to talks about UNbricking as well. Give it a read.
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It actually goes deeper than that. Apple has been penalised for an action that was considered illegal under consumer laws and penalised. That action was proven but that was not the only law broken. Apple in illegal bricking phones, did make illegal use of a computer network and illegal use of a person computerised product, they used the computer network illegally to make use of a product owned by the person targeted and forced the product to turn itself off permanently. That is more than just a consumer rel
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You were right, once upon a time.
But that's the thing about an open language like English; it changes whenever people want, even though the People are mostly a bunch of idiots. They're not wrong though, the language really does include whatever stupid shit they're saying these days.
So you can never just know that you're using the term correctly, and other people are incorrect; all you can really know is the way you used to use the term, and that if you keep using it in the same way then for you it can mean
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I have a bricked phone right here on my desk.
It goes through the update process but then fails saying it can't communicate with iTunes.
Two new cables, two different computers.
BRICKED
Re:Not "Bricked" (Score:4, Insightful)
I don't think you understand "bricked".
When something is "bricked", it can then do anything a brick can, and nothing the bricks can't.
Bricks can't be given a "fix" that turns them into a smartphone.
If the user can't fix it and it didn't get fixed until Apple was forced to fix it. Then it was fucking bricked.
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If the user can't fix it and it didn't get fixed until Apple was forced to fix it. Then it was fucking bricked.
Perhaps we need to start using the term Apple Bricked for "Manufacturer has decided you're not allowed to use the device you've paid for until the manufacturer is forced to concede you consumer rights"
I think this should be used in a similar way to the term Streisand Effect
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So nothing ever gets bricked, as the structural integrity of phones and computers make them ill suited for building houses?
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Bricks can't be given a "fix" that turns them into a smartphone.
You're talking about a problem that required complete and full intervention from the manufacturer to correct. The end user had something as useful to them as a brick and it was only through the will of the brick factory that they were able to be given something else.
I'm okay with this use of the word brick. If the user did something that they can undo then it's not a brick. But if the user requires intervention from the manufacturer then you have created a distinction without any practical purpose. By your
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Bricked is relative. If I brick my router while installing DD-WRT that does not mean that the manufacturer could not plug into their dev port and fix it, or anyone could not open the box and do some soldering work. It means that you cannot fix it. Bricked is used pretty much exclusively for software, and sometimes for minor hardware damage caused by software. In all cases the devices can be easily fixed, just not by the typical user, and not without using non standard channels (standard with respect to how
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Teeth? More like a mosquito bite.
Re: Right to repair. (Score:2)
With a 6.7 billion fine it would be a painful penalty causing a hiccup for Apple.
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You mean like a dentist?
That'll learn'em (Score:5, Insightful)
Do they realize that a mosquito bit is more annoying to the decision makers at Apple then having to pay a $6.7 million dollar fine? This is hardly a deterrent, they need to add a few extra zeros to that before Apple will change any behavior.
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That is probably a better way of awarding damages like this.
Get away from $X and go to % of net worth.
The only way to punish a company is to ultimately punish the shareholders. And the only way you punish the share holders is to take money out of their pockets and the only way you can do that is to impact the company's bottom line. When a fine or damages is awarded that affects the stock price negatively, THEN it is an effective fine.
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That's not a practicable option. The closest you could get would be simply banning operations in your country.
If it was a thing, every country would do it, and every company would have negative infinity net value.
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And if countries were willing to do this - levy fines based on, say, the corporation's market value, then traders would shy away from companies that are likely to incur such fines, and corporations would be forced to act lawfully, to some degree.
A few hundred billion dollar fines would also do wonders for the national debt.
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And what behavior is that?
Apple didn't intentionally "brick" anything. It's not reasonable to expect them to support 3rd party displays which they neither designed nor vetted for their products.
I'm not saying that having 3rd party hardware in your phone is wrong but a software update may brick your phone because said 3rd party screens may have a hackish/incomplete implementation of the display interface.
This ain't auto parts. Most cars don't run a touchy high-speed differential signaling protocol between th
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Not even close.
Ink/toner and coffee are just liquid / powder that only need to meet a very small and irrelevant set of requirements (mainly thickness/viscosity, melting or dilution point).
A display requires a very specific set of wired connections, power requirements, interfaces (both hard and soft) as well as latencies/speeds and sensitivity levels. Both the OS and the hardware need to understand each other before anything can happen. When you install hardware (on any tech) that is not certified, you run
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The difference is between intentionally refusing to work, and unintentionally not working due to an incompatibility.
It appears that apple intentionally broke otherwise working third party screens, and hence a justified fine.
Re: That'll learn'em (Score:1)
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And what behavior is that?
Apple didn't intentionally "brick" anything. It's not reasonable to expect them to support 3rd party displays which they neither designed nor vetted for their products.
Except that Apple have also done this with refurbished displays [engadget.com] eg where the glass has cracked, but the underlying electronics are fine so the gladd was replaced
It's also been proven when a display was swapped from one fully working iphone6 to another working iphone6 [ifixit.org]
This ain't auto parts.
Fake Auto parts can cause serious injury [manilaspeak.com] or even death [sproxil.com]
Personally I'd prefer to use a 3rd party part in my phone than my car. I'm far less likely to have a life changing injury from my phone
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If they use the money to fund additional enforcement efforts then it could be more powerful, but I don't know anything about if that happens in Australia or not.
Unfortunately, this amount of money is likely too small to even get Apple execs to ask where it goes, or care. But it doesn't have to hurt to lose the money for losing it to modify behavior; though is certainly helps.
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Do they realize that a mosquito bit is more annoying to the decision makers at Apple then having to pay a $6.7 million dollar fine?
Of course they do. They're not trying to kill the goddamn goose, they just want some of the gold. These trivial fines don't even slightly dissuade Apple from doing business in their country, but they are a nice little shot of funding.
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This is hardly a deterrent
The punishment fits the crime. You don't arrest people for j-walking, you slap them with a $50 fine which is about as annoying as a mosquito bite to most people too.
The distinction here is that this entire case was based on the premise that Apple said 3rd parties aren't authorized to repair something. They created this Error 53, and then fixed it before the ACCC even got involved.
This mosquito bite is for making a deceptive claim and nothing more.
Pocket Change (Score:1)
The fine appears pointless since Apple has billions in cash and such a paltry fine will do little to discourage similar behavior in the future.
Re:Pocket Change (Score:5, Interesting)
You are correct, however I think it sets a precedent. And once a precedent is set, the fines tend to ratchet higher in the future as you can now argue that they knew better and decided to do it despite the fine.
Of course for this to work, you need a jurisdiction that actually has consumer protection laws, and not only do those not exist in North America, they're becoming rarer and rarer by the day in the rest of the world.
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FFS, what a day to be without mod points.
1) You obviously didn't read TFA
2) You can't master basic English (responsive? shotty? really??)
3) You have no idea what you're on about.
Step away from the keyboard. I'm revoking your internet privileges for 24 hours.
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Wait, are you saying he didn't advocate that Apple stop answering low-value repair calls for consumers without professional qualifications?!
Golly! With a comment so stupid, how can we really be sure he didn't mean what he said??!
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Every millionaire I've met would rather spend a thousand dollars on a lawyer than pay a fifty cent tax, so yes; if you can somehow swindle them into talking about it as a tax instead of a fine, then they'll stop feeling like they got away with something and feel like they need to avoid it next time! As long as it is a fine, they just feel good about paying it, it means they were trying hard!
fines need to dramatically increase (Score:3, Insightful)
If you do something like this as an individual? That is, purposefully destroy something of someone's, for profit? And in a fraudulent way? And then publicly lie about it, further compounding things?
You'd be called a fucking psychopath, and fines wouldn't be the equiv of a cup of coffee. Hell, this fine is the same as .. well, less than a penny in a normal person's pocket.
What would happen to a *person*? After all, corporations have greater freedoms, powers, and abilities as they've been legally defined as 'persons' in most commonwealth nations. So -- if that's the case?
Well.. a person might see jail, but would certainly be hit with a life crippling fine.
Is this life crippling? Does this make Apple reel with the implications, tottering on personal bankruptcy? The fine or the jail time would, for something like this, for 'just a real person'.
Corporations need to be *deathly afraid* of running afoul of the law. Fire people without morals, that skirt legalities, because otherwise? They'll be bankrupt.
This fine should have been in the billion dollar range, because Apple has billions in the bank.
And the same should be so, for any corp that willingly steals and defrauds people.
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You realize this story is about Australia, right?
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If you do something like this as an individual? That is, purposefully destroy something of someone's, for profit? And in a fraudulent way? And then publicly lie about it, further compounding things?
You forgot about the bit where they then promptly issued a fix after the outcry.
But your rant is irrelevant. The fine had nothing to do with getting an error 53. The fine had to do with telling customer that they had no right to warranty if their phone had been repaired (false under Australian law). Also Apple had to separately pay compensation to 5000 customers.
That's it?!? (Score:1)
Should have made it 6.7 billion to make them notice. 6.7 million is morning coffee for the legal team.
Interesting precident... (Score:3, Insightful)
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Depends. A penalty shouldn't be based on how much you hate a company, it is proportional to damage done. I can't work out the detail, but TFA implies there were 5000 customers affected which means the penalty is about the price of two new iPhones per customer,
This seems appropriate to me.
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Depends. A penalty shouldn't be based on how much you hate a company, it is proportional to damage done. I can't work out the detail, but TFA implies there were 5000 customers affected which means the penalty is about the price of two new iPhones per customer,
This seems appropriate to me.
And I'm sure it's just part of the cost of doing business for Apple.
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And? The punishment fitted the crime. The fine was for telling customers that their warranty was void. They separately also had to compensate customers, and Australia has a history of escalating punishments for repeat offenders.
The summary and article didn't say (Score:2)
anything about court costs or legal fees in addition to the fine, which seems to be a slap on the wrist...
apple's anti 3rd party repair policies (Score:2, Insightful)
apple is definitely up for a slap in the face. after applying to be an apple repair center for nearly 2 years and reply and reply, waiting and waiting... they came back and said.. no.. we are shutting down and getting rid of 3rd party authorized repair centers -- say what?
sounds like the John Deere & Apple legal issue. -- is it my tractor or not? why can't i fix it myself?
https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2017/mar/06/nebraska-farmers-right-to-repair-john-deere-apple
rotten bastards..doh! it's ok..
Ohhh nooo! (Score:3)
No beef wellington on the menu at the campus cafe this week, got to tighten our belts.
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No beef wellington on the menu at the campus cafe this week, got to tighten our belts.
Why do Americans think Beef Wellington is fancy?
Its a beef roast wrapped in pastry... if you struggle to make that you should probably admit you're a failure of a cook.
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Because beef tenderloin is usually regarded as the best cut of meat and it's a ridiculously complicated preparation? I would agree that most Americans find the simplest of cooking tasks complicated but let's have a looksee at classic beef wellington: .............."Preparation
Make the duxelles
Heat the butter and oil in a 10-inch skillet over low heat. Add the shallots and cook, stirring often, until translucent, 3 to 4 minutes. Add the mushrooms, stir well, and raise the heat to medium. Cook, stirring occas
Idiot ruling from court (Score:1, Informative)
The courts can't hold apple accountable for third party repairs that weren't within the spec of the official original parts used.
You repaired your phone with a substandard part, so what if it works for *THAT* IOS version - it's not going to work for any future versions if apple decide to fully utilise that part's speed/capabilities, and apple can't know the shit parts third party repairers are going to try to pass-off as working.
Let me iterate that again - the spec on the replacement part has changed, to th
Apple had dealer only tools needed to pair parts (Score:2)
Apple had dealer only tools needed to pair parts that they did not give to 3rd party shops. That is the issue and is the same issue with cars.
What if GM had an change oil light that needed an dealer only tool to reset?
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We took a fully functional, space gray iPhone 6s and removed its original home button. In its place, we dropped in the stock home button from a different, rose gold iPhone 6s.
We downloaded and installed the latest iOS through iTunes by connecting to a computer (in this case, a MacBook Pro). Halfway through the process, iTunes gave us the bad news: The iPhone could not be updated. An unknown error occurred (53).
I may have cherry picked the sentences, but not changed the context etc to imply a different meaning.
Search for yourself for "iphone 6 error 53 refurbished screen"
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Error 53 "security keys don't match"
If it said that, maybe people wouldn't be as annoyed. From what I can see on Apple's website about error 53 [apple.com] there is no indication of "security keys don't match".
My initial response however was to the bulk of the statement, all of which is about 3rd party parts.
The courts can't hold apple accountable for third party repairs that weren't within the spec of the official original parts used.
You repaired your phone with a substandard part, so what if it works for *THAT* IOS version - it's not going to work for any future versions if apple decide to fully utilise that part's speed/capabilities, and apple can't know the shit parts third party repairers are going to try to pass-off as working.
Let me iterate that again - the spec on the replacement part has changed, to that of a lower specification which *appears* to work. A typical 'car' analogy would be you getting to sue GM because your aftermarket fuel filter fucked the engine over after another 10k miles.
My response was that the whole 3rd party parts does not cover this. The same error occurs with original parts. Perhaps if there was one error code for 3rd
So? (Score:2)
About 16 minutes of iPhone sales (Score:2, Funny)
Assuming an average cost/revenue of $700, $6.7M USD is just above 9,500 iPhones.
Per Google search, they sell about 590 per MINUTE (4th quarter last year on average).
So that's about 16 minutes of sales:
https://www.google.com/search?... [google.com]
They were probably laughing while lounging on their yachts that cost more than the settlement.
Wow. What a punishment! NOT! (Score:2)
7 million dollars.
Wow.
Apple spends more than that on TOILET PAPER!
Their annual revenues are north of 200 BILLION and have been since 2015.
This isn't even a slap on the wrist.
This is more of a smiling "tsk tsk tsk" while shaking a "naughty naughty" finger at them.
Why no criminal charges? (Score:2)
This should fall under the statutes relating to the destruction of private property or theft of private property.
Cost of doing business (Score:2)
6.7 million USD? Is that a joke? Apple probably spends more on cardboard packaging than that, a year.
In the face of such a horrifically crippling punishment, I'm fully confident Apple will never ever try anything shady again!
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Chump Change for Apple. (Score:1)
Not enough (Score:2)