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Brazil Judge Says Apple Selling iPhone Without Power Adapter Is 'Abusive and Illegal' (bloomberg.com) 170

A Brazilian judge ruled that U.S. tech giant Apple engaged in an "abusive and illegal" practice by selling new iPhones without power adapters. From a report: In a decision dated April 12, regional judge Vanderlei Caires Pinheiro from Goias state in central Brazil ordered the company to pay compensation of 5,000 reais ($1,080) to a customer who made a complaint. In his ruling posted on a legal website, the judge said that the adapter is essential for the normal functioning of the iPhone, and found that the manufacturer is violating local consumer law by removing if from boxes. The decision could prove costly for the company if it is forced to compensate more Brazilian consumers, or start including accessories in products sold locally.
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Brazil Judge Says Apple Selling iPhone Without Power Adapter Is 'Abusive and Illegal'

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  • I bought an impact wrench one time to remove a really stubborn bolt on my work van. Wouldn't you know it, the damn thing didn't include an air compressor! Luckily, I already owned one, because I don't live in a country where such a dumb lawsuit would succeed.

    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      by Anonymous Coward
      an air tool impact wrench is considered an accessory to an air compressor, aa phone is NOT an accessory to a phone charger. This lawsuit would have a good chance of success in most countries. What country do you live in where it wouldn't? certainly not any country in most of the western world.
      • by e3m4n ( 947977 ) on Thursday April 21, 2022 @06:02PM (#62466904)
        LOTs of electronics ship with a charging cable NOT a charger. iPhone is hardly alone in this.
        • by luvirini ( 753157 ) on Friday April 22, 2022 @01:12AM (#62467722)

          Before Apple removed the charger, almost all consumer electronics of all kind came with everything you needed make them work if they were standalone thing.

          Heck, even the 30 euro electronic toothbrush I bought few days ago comes with everything needed to use and recharge it..

          And in cases where it was not case, it was clearly marked on the packaging like "Batteries not included" in clear text on the front.

          The Apple (an now after other companies like Samsung) phone boxes do not say clearly "Charger not included".

          • Before Apple removed the charger, almost all consumer electronics of all kind came with everything you needed make them work if they were standalone thing.

            a) False. In fact any device that requires AA or AAA batteries doesn't ship with a charger, and usually didn't even ship with batteries.
            b) You do not need a charger to make the phone work. They give you a cable which allows you to plug in to a myriad of palaces to charge the device.

            In other news I just recently bought a slow cooker. It unfortunately did not come with a bundled power station.

            • > False. In fact any device that requires AA or AAA batteries doesn't ship with a charger, and usually didn't even ship with batteries.

              Why did you not quote the part where I said that?

              > You do not need a charger to make the phone work. They give you a cable which allows you to plug in to a myriad of palaces to charge the device.

              Tell that to my cousin who finally updated his 7-8 year old phone last year after the charger fried. He does not have a computer or such. So I do not know where he would plug i

            • by mjwx ( 966435 )

              Before Apple removed the charger, almost all consumer electronics of all kind came with everything you needed make them work if they were standalone thing.

              a) False. In fact any device that requires AA or AAA batteries doesn't ship with a charger, and usually didn't even ship with batteries.
              b) You do not need a charger to make the phone work. They give you a cable which allows you to plug in to a myriad of palaces to charge the device.

              In other news I just recently bought a slow cooker. It unfortunately did not come with a bundled power station.

              A is FALSE as a battery is a consumable, also they have to write "batteries not included" on the packaging and in many countries, the advertising as well. Besides most devices, including phones, have an internal battery that is included.

              B, yes you do need a charger to make a phone work. It is a reasonable expectation that I can use the standard BS1363 power socket to provide power to any device that requires an external power supply for operation including charging (feel free to swap BS1363 for the standa

        • by mjwx ( 966435 )

          LOTs of electronics ship with a charging cable NOT a charger. iPhone is hardly alone in this.

          Erm... define "LOTs". The last thing I bought that didn't come with a cable was a printer... and that was a USB cable, it still came with a power cable. This was nearly 5 years ago.

          Yes, I'd love for this Brazilian judge to go to town on printer manufacturers.

          I bought a Nokia G21 recently, £150 phone, it came with a charger and cable. Any phone that doesn't is selling you an incomplete product and should be returned for a full refund.

      • a phone is NOT an accessory to a phone charger.

        You're right, a charger is considered an accessory to a phone. There's no requirement to sell accessories bundled.

    • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

      by FuegoFuerte ( 247200 )

      I'll bet the packaging said pretty clearly somewhere that it had a 1/4" NPT inlet, and probably listed a requirement for how much air it needed too.

      If the iPhone box said "USB-C charging port; 2A or greater power source recommended, adapter not included" in a prominent way, there would probably be no case here. If it was super fine print in typical Apple pale grey text on white background, then I would think it's a much stronger case. The fact that most phones come with a way to charge them also works aga

      • by Powercntrl ( 458442 ) on Thursday April 21, 2022 @06:03PM (#62466906) Homepage

        Here's the back of an iPhone box. [imgur.com] Found that image searching on eBay for sellers selling empty boxes (seriously).

        As to the legibility, here's the text from that image as interpreted by my iPhone's built-in OCR. I didn't edit this at all:

        Includes: iPhone 13 Pro and USB-C to Lightning Cable; power adapter and headphones sold separately.

        • > Found that image searching on eBay for sellers selling empty boxes (seriously)

          Seems crazy but I bought one once - when my daughter wanted a phone. I bought a used phone and a box. I packed it up like new, and I know she appreciated that. Worth the few bucks is cost.

          • by narcc ( 412956 ) on Friday April 22, 2022 @12:10AM (#62467642) Journal

            I get it. That can make all the difference. I'm going to tell a related but needlessly long story.

            My wife is a social worker. Every Christmas, her organization tries to get kids in placement some decent gifts. Younger kids are usually easy to figure out, but for teens, 'we' usually just ask if there is something they'd like. (When say 'we', there is a lot of separation between us and the kids. Whoever is assigned their case handles all of those interactions. We just get the name of the worker and what they want to get for them. The most we ever find out about the kids is their gender and approximate age.)

            There are a few local churches that pick up a lot that expense. We'll put up lists with specific items or more general things like "toys suitable for 6-year old girls" and individuals, families, or groups will put their name beside what they plan to buy.

            Every now and again, however, someone cheaps out in a senseless way. We make it a point to replace any cheap crayons we see come in with Crayola, for example. No one on the planet wants to color with that Rose Art or Cra-Z-Art crap. It's just a few cents difference, for goodness sake!

            One teen girl wanted a FitBit, which was in fashion at the time. No big deal, right? It's a "bigger" item, but you could get a basic model for less than $100. Besides, we've seen some families go absolutely crazy with how much they're willing to spend on kids they'll never meet. It didn't seem unreasonable.

            Anyhow, someone did get her a FitBit, but just couldn't bring them selves to part with the extra $20 or whatever it would have been to just get her a new one. The unit was refurbished, which I normally wouldn't care about if it still looked new, but it came packaged in a just a plastic bag with the resellers logo printed across the top. What message does that send? "We care, but not all that much. Here's some junk that someone else didn't want."

            Well, we obviously couldn't give that to her, so we went and bought a new one for her ourselves. Granted, I'm sure she would have been just as happy to get the refurbished one, but why add needless disappointment on a holiday that already sucks because she's stuck in placement?

            tl;dr -- How a gift is packaged is important.

        • Yes the print is small plus if you bought an iPhone ðY" before USB-C like the cable included, you are stuck.

          Apple fans with USB-C to connect it to a USB-A situation is really a terrible answer, square peg round hole ðY!

          That picture also answers print readability and it is too darn small and sneaky for that matter.

          So Apple is stuck paying plenty for a bad decision.

      • Its not the only electronic device to only ship with a cable. Most wireless earbuds only come with a cable. Most 18550 tactical flashlights dont include the charger for the usb cable. Ive got a ton of tiny micro usb cables of like 8in long to charge up li-ion packs for quad copters and drones, etc. i dont really need more damn 1 port chargers. What I buy are 5 port usb charging hubs. A 1 port charger is as useless as tits on a bull if you have more than 1 device. AFAIK apple watches come with a magna charge
    • by Kremmy ( 793693 )
      Did your air tool include the proper fitting? Was it a proprietary fitting that only your manufacturer created, or was it an industry standard fitting where you expect third parties to have actually created something suitable for the purpose? Did you have to pay an exorbitant fee for the cable to hook your impact wrench to your air compressor? Could you get one of any number of air compressors made by any number of manufacturers, without having to be sure you got the one with the particular fitting for your
      • Not an Apple person, so I could be wrong, but I thought they made this change when they migrated to USB-C PD charging. However, they did it when they moved to an at the time rare standard, and with the advertising talking about how they were doing it to be green!

        • but I thought they made this change when they migrated to USB-C PD charging.

          You'd think so, but not all their products have USB-C ports (yet, if ever). No, this was all "we're soooo green now!" B.S. designed to make you spend more money.

          • by edwdig ( 47888 )

            They did the move at the same time they added support for USB-C PD charging. They changed the cables included in the box from Lighting/USB-A to Lightning/USB-C. The old cables and chargers were still compatible.

            If you were upgrading, you got a new cable in case you wanted it, but most people probably kept using the accessories they were already using.

      • Most air tools have you install the fittings. The thread however is usually standard. Though i have run into that too.
    • by anonymouscoward52236 ( 6163996 ) on Thursday April 21, 2022 @06:22PM (#62466988)

      You didn't even include a power grid with my device! I was expecting a power grid to be included! LOL.

    • by ltcdata ( 626981 ) on Thursday April 21, 2022 @10:23PM (#62467488)

      In brazil there is a law that says that electronic equipment should be sold with everything you need for it to work.
      An iphone without a charger violates that law.

      • Just depends on whether a case can be made for the ubiquity of USB-A outlets.

        Nobody would suggest that electronic equipment that relies on a grid power source would require the inclusion of some kind of generator. You would just use a wall outlet but you would need to purchase a power subscription of some kind still.

        In my mind at least, and, apparently Apple's as well, USB-A outlets are common enough that they don't need to provide another one.

  • I have collected a suitcase full of USB cables & wall wart chargers from phones and various other electronic gadgets i purchased in the past
    • by Krishnoid ( 984597 ) on Thursday April 21, 2022 @05:23PM (#62466762) Journal
      At least the EU standardized USB cables [bbc.com]. But OMG, if Apple needs to compensate a million iPhone users ... that'll be over a Brazilian dollars. That's some reais money right there.
      • You're talking some real* money there... ;-)
         
        * The real is the Brazilian unit of currency.

      • by Wolfrider ( 856 )

        > The decision could prove costly for the company if it is forced to compensate more Brazilian consumers, or start including accessories in products sold locally

        Oh F**K RIGHT OFF, the company is worth something like 40 quadrillion dollars at this point. There's nothing to be gained by cheaping out and cheating consumers out of a necessary item to use the damn phone on an ongoing basis!

    • I have collected a suitcase full of USB cables & wall wart chargers from phones and various other electronic gadgets i purchased in the past

      So long as Apple are going to honour the warranty regardless of the charger I use then that's fine.

  • by Octorian ( 14086 ) on Thursday April 21, 2022 @05:13PM (#62466724) Homepage

    Mobile phones have come with chargers for so long, that I could certainly see a reasonable expectation on the part of a customer that one would be included in the box.
    Of course its entirely possible that Apple did not make it obvious that one was not included.

    What I'm more interested in is not whether device manufacturers should be required to include such an accessory, as its a slippery slope. Rather, I'd like to know what is considered "reasonable notice to the purchaser" that its something you have to purchase separately.

    (Since a lot of products have accessories that are required for normal usage, but not included. And I hate how people tend to single out mobile phones as if they should have a unique set of non-RF-related rules and regulations that apply to them.)

    • by fuzzyfuzzyfungus ( 1223518 ) on Thursday April 21, 2022 @05:24PM (#62466768) Journal
      It seems like some sort of standard for what the context of 'normal functioning' is would be useful.

      The judgement that a USB-C charger is necessary for normal functioning is arguably correct in a context where USB-C ports and chargers are somewhere between abnormal and absent; while trivially false in one where buyers of iphones overwhelmingly have such things already.

      I have no idea what the gadget stockpile and USB port types of the average Brazilian iPhone buyer are; but I'd hope that, when a nontrivial judgement depends on the answer to that question, there's some standard of evidence better than the judge just spitballing something that he thinks seems plausible.
      • by redback ( 15527 )

        the cable they give you in the new iphones is lightning to C

      • No USB-C ports and chargers here in my colony, but several old USB-A chargers and cables though! We'll get USB-C as the old USB-A die and break.

      • The judgement that a USB-C charger is necessary for normal functioning is arguably correct in a context where USB-C ports and chargers are somewhere between abnormal and absent;

        Fortunately Apple sell chargers. Now I get it you may be a millennial and do not recall a time where every device not only did not come with a charger but frequently said "Batteries not included" on the box. Yet somehow we managed to use said devices anyway.

        Funny enough if you asked me right now what is easier to buy, a AA battery or a USB charger, I would likely point to the latter, they have largely taken the place of batteries in the checkout isle above the chocolate and cigarettes.

    • by Lije Baley ( 88936 ) on Thursday April 21, 2022 @05:31PM (#62466794)

      "Batteries not included" used to be so common in advertising that it makes you think there was some legal need for an explicit statement, at least in the past.

      https://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pm... [tvtropes.org]

      • that it makes you think there was some legal need for an explicit statement

        Words are hard to read, which may be why Apple not only uses words but actually has a picture of "What's in the box".

    • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

      by Anonymous Coward

      In the very miniscule chance this person didn't already have a charger, they are only a few dollars. This judge's behavior is abusive, not only to Apple, but the environment. This case should have been tossed or the person at least fined for bringing a frivolous, time and money wasting idiot. Batteries are not included in a ton of products that require them. Chargers for phones shouldn't be included either at this point. Either you have a dozen or so already or you can get one at literally any corner/c

      • This judge's behavior is abusive

        No, not the judge, it's instead the law:

        found that the manufacturer is violating local consumer law by removing [the adaptor] from boxes

    • by gweihir ( 88907 )

      Oh? My last phone did not come with a charger (Fairphone 4). And with the upcoming EU regulation, that will likely become more common.

      "Reasonable" is any list of parts included. Like, you know, basically any manufacturer does. Sometimes they are still struggling with the idea, for example my last laptop (Lenovo) came with an USB-C PSU, while I pretty much expected it to have none. So "Contents: 1 Phone" is clearly sufficient to say that there is no power adapter. A friendly vendor will add "Charger not incl

    • From an environmental approach its best to NOT include a shitty 1port wall-wart. They just fill up landfills. You csn always buy the 1port apple one for $28, or the Walmart 2port for $10. I prefer a 5-10 port power hub. Ive got a few of these in my home. At any given time im charging battery packs, rechargeable batteries, e-readers, tablets, flashlights, etc.
    • I thought that Apple's warranty specifically states that using non-Apple charger voids your warranty and any future support. This was mentioned a couple of years ago with the exploding batteries.
      • You just need a "certified" charger. Doesn't have to be Apple brand. Of course dealing with fakes and knockoffs is another issue.

    • Requiring companies to include it is not a 'slippery slope' - its already down the hill and off the cliff. PCs came with floppy drives forever then one day, they stopped. PCs came with CD/DVD drives forever. Then one day it stopped. Should the judge require that laptops ship with external floppy drives and CD/DVD drives now? If the box or ad claimed that it came with a charger, then its fraud and potentially within the realm of the state to respond. Other than that, this is an opinion with a gun.
    • Mobile phones have come with chargers for so long, that I could certainly see a reasonable expectation on the part of a customer that one would be included in the box.

      Mobile phones are such a tiny subset of consumer battery powered devices that no it is not reasonable. Since back in the 60s we've been buying devices which not only do not include battery chargers, they often didn't even include batteries.

      Yeah maybe the person is unable to read. Oh wait Apple's website has a picture showing "What's in the box" and it shows a phone and a USB-C cable.

      Stupidity should not be a paycheck.

  • by fuzzyfuzzyfungus ( 1223518 ) on Thursday April 21, 2022 @05:15PM (#62466732) Journal
    "He also rejected Apple’s claim that the USB-C cable was not exclusively compatible with its products and could be used with power adapters from other manufacturers. The device has a different design and cannot be used with any USB port, he said."

    It sure is good that law school helps you understand the distinction between a proprietary cable and the fact that the USB standard encompasses more than one port type.
    • by gweihir ( 88907 )

      Judge incompetent, vastly oversteps the boundaries of his understanding. Not new. According to a lawyer-friend, not rare either. Obviously many judges are not suitable to wield the power they have. I expect Apple will be able to kill this nicely and the judge will have nicely deserved egg on his face.

    • How old is this guy?

  • Simple Solution (Score:5, Insightful)

    by aerogems ( 339274 ) on Thursday April 21, 2022 @05:17PM (#62466748)

    Include a promo code card or something in every new phone that can be redeemed for an AC adapter and cable. Or maybe you are presented with the option to request one when setting up iOS for the first time and it's tied to the device's serial number. Achieves Apple's stated goal of reducing the amount of e-waste, and for those people who don't have like 50 of these things floating around, they can still get one included in the price of the device.

    • by vux984 ( 928602 )

      and for those people who don't have like 50 of these things floating around

      Can they all charge an iphone at full speed? Most chargers really aren't well marked at what wattages and voltages they support; its nice to be a buy a new $1000+ device and just get a charger you know properly supports it, and that isn't a cheap knock-off that will last 5 days.

      The idea of an in-box offer isn't bad, but you shouldn't need to rely on the phone being charged in order to claim your free charger.

      • "Can they all charge an iphone at full speed? Most chargers really aren't well marked at what wattages and voltages they support; its nice to be a buy a new $1000+ device and just get a charger you know properly supports it, and that isn't a cheap knock-off that will last 5 days."

        Presumably this would be redeemed at an Apple approved supplier (like their own stores). But either way at least in the US almost every single AC to DC supply has voltage and current or power clearly labeled. Heck, you probably hav
        • K.I.S.S. is the best approach here. Give a one time coupon code on a printed paper in every box if it doesn't get added on checkout.

          Killing trees. Gee, there's a novel approach to a program intended to curb waste.

          That second S clarifies the audience, and reducing the Greed that is killing the host planet, isn't a Simple task anymore.

          • The amount of paper involved will be a tiny percentage of the amount of paper already used in the packaging. We're talking about a piece of paper approximately the size of a business card. Once the user has made the decision to buy a smartphone, that piece of paper is irrelevant.

    • Include a promo code card or something in every new phone that can be redeemed for an AC adapter and cable. Or maybe you are presented with the option to request one when setting up iOS for the first time and it's tied to the device's serial number. Achieves Apple's stated goal of reducing the amount of e-waste, and for those people who don't have like 50 of these things floating around, they can still get one included in the price of the device.

      This is an entirely reasonable and well thought out solution... HOW DARE YOU!

    • This is accepting the presumption that their good-faith reasoning is 'reducing e-waste' and not 'if we can get away with doing this, we're gonna save a lot of a money'.
    • Even simpler. In Brazil dont let them checkout the shopping cart without buying the overpriced $28 charger from apple. Problem solved.
    • Re:Simple Solution (Score:5, Insightful)

      by mobby_6kl ( 668092 ) on Thursday April 21, 2022 @07:21PM (#62467118)

      Achieves Apple's stated goal of reducing the amount of e-waste, and for those people who don't have like 50 of these things floating around, they can still get one included in the price of the device.

      But it doesn't achieve Apple's actual goal of selling you the $2 adapter that would've been included for free, for $30 instead.

      • That's why they don't give you a free $2 mousepad with their iMacs too, so you'll buy their $30 Apple one. Because people buy USB power adapters like they buy mousepads and batteries, from the device's manufacturer.

    • Mod up. But please note, the pre-existing law was in place, and Apple had no excuse for ignoring it (a bit like the EU). Offering a free charger probably would be compliant. Although in that market, I expect 99.5% to claim it.
    • Or you could just reduce the cost of the device and get a consumer to buy said charger if needed. When you offer something for free, idiots will feel entitled to it regardless if you need it or not. That does not reduce e-waste in the slightest.

  • Perhaps the right answer is to leave packaging unchanged, but make adapters available on request. But the answer isn't to "punish" Apple for not littering the landscape with unused e-waste, or to give some dingus $1,080 because he's somehow wounded for not getting a $10 wall wart.

    What a world. Mr. Pinheiro should be force-fed one adapter's worth of plastic and wires.

  • I first knew about it here: it's very local (and can be easily corrected), it's not news even here in Brazil...
  • This stinks of a brazen and frivolous money grab.

    I can hardly open a drawer in the house without finding a few lightning and micro-USB cables that I stashed away over the years because they're so ubiquitous that they're mostly just in the way at this point. Give it a year and every drawer will have a USB-C cable in there keeping the others company. And I'm not even sure when the last time was that I was more than a dozen feet from an existing USB-A port into which I could plug one of those cables. And, a

    • Hmm to be fair the lightening cable that now comes with iphones is a USB-C to lightening. A usbc-pa adapter is less common. What they SHOULD have included is the small usb-c female to usb-a male adapter. Thats cheap as hell.
  • by fbobraga ( 1612783 ) on Thursday April 21, 2022 @05:42PM (#62466830) Homepage
    ... for the judge/rule was that this behavior ("sell a thing that need a second purchase to work") is against Brazilian Consumer Code.
    • Except the argument is that it doesn't need a second purchase because USB chargers are ubiquitous. It's like buying a lawnmower and and then suing because you couldn't start it when you got home because you didn't buy fuel.

      • t's like buying a lawnmower and and then suing because you couldn't start it when you got home because you didn't buy fuel.

        Your analogy only makes sense if there's only one maker/seller of the fuel (and it's the same maker/seller of the first purchase: in Portuguese, the name of what is legally forbidden in Brazil is "Venda Casada", something like "tie-in sale" on English....)

  • Until there is only a handful of clearly labels and specced bricks, they should continue to include them.
    Every phone power brick I have all have different power ratings.
  • How the heck is not getting a charger in the box worth $1080 ? Was the judge watching TV and decided to charge per HD pixel?
    At most, having no charger is worth $30 .. and that's being generous ($15 for a charger and $15 for mental anguish of going through "omfg where is the charger?")

    • court and legal fees

    • Once lawyers get involved there are those pesky punitive damages.
    • Just rack it up with everything else thats gone bat shit crazy lately. Theres days I feel like im living in the Truman Show, except its a sitcom of the absurd.
    • by lpq ( 583377 )

      Courts, depending on country often charge punitive or legislative "fines" rather than actual costs because actual costs don't motivate.

      Like in US with digital media copying -- used to be hampered by actual costs against copies -- like $0.20 per violation -- a pittance to bring against a single-download "pirate". So hollywood bought new copyright laws from
      their legislatures to charge $250,000 / violation -- nothing remotely resembling actual damages. Even $1000/violation would be nothing to apple if the us

  • Apple no longer includes a power adapter.

    If you are trading up an Iphone, don't you have to give them the original adapter as well?
    If you are donating the phone don't they also want the adapter?

    This leaves you with the need for an adapter to make the new phone work, just like you were a first time buyer. How is this anything more than a money grab?

    Those of you with the claimed many extra adapters so you don't need a new one, do the phones get lost or broken that often that you have extras laying
  • If apple used USB as all other manufacturers or sold their charger at a reasonable price I would be ok with it, basically everyone has a bunch of charges laying around and e-waste is a concern, but they do it because they can charge an absurd amount for the chargers and their fanatic costumers will buy happily, it is just another way of increasing their margins disguised as good intentions

    • by jaa101 ( 627731 )

      If apple used USB

      The phone comes with a USB-C cable which allows it to be charged with standard USB-C devices including chargers.

    • Those same consumers, are also Apple shareholders.

      Obvious Capitalist Catch-22, is obvious. Those are crocodile tears, and this is the worlds smallest violin.

    • If apple used USB as all other manufacturers

      Apple does use USB. Their chargers are all USB, and the phone ships with a cable to plug into a USB charger.

      I'm sure the rest of your post is equally as stupid.

  • I don't need another one.
    • Good for you. My phone is the first USB-C device I owned. Fortunately I don't buy Apple products, and my phone came with a charger. (Though many companies like to copy Apple, good or bad.) How much did Apple reduce the price when they stopped including chargers?
  • I think it's good to not include the charging cable if it's a standard one (even though corps won't pass the savings onto consumers), but still think it should be included in some way because there will be people that just don't have the right cable and so this ruling sounds good to me.

    The middle ground IMO is to include some sort of charging cable "voucher". There are some logistics to overcome: The voucher needs to be usable anywhere that sells the device in question; big box stores won't have an issue wi

    • by lpq ( 583377 )

      The problem wasn't a lack of cable -- I got a USB3-mini -to-USB cable with my phone, but didn't get anything to plug it into that would satisfy the iphone's power draw (20W minimum, 30W for fast charge) vs. standard USB's 2.5W output (500mWx5V) (or 7.5 for special charger USB).

      While my computer could provide the 20W minimum, I needed to buy a separate charger for the fast charge.

  • This is rather like automakers deleting "cigar lighters" despite their dominant use being high current power ports since the 1970s CB radio era.

  • ... is to force all handset, tablets and laptops to use a standard connector, cable and charging protocol. i.e. a phone should be able to charge wired or wirelessly from any compliant charge which cannot discriminate or favour particular devices by using proprietary protocols, connectors, docks or any of the other bullshit that Apple (and occasionally other manufacturers) do to lock people in.
  • ...are a special case. AFAIK, the reasoning is that where's it's feasible, electronic devices should use standard, interchangeable chargers & that those chargers shouldn't come with every compatible electronic device that people buy. Just looking on my table now, there are 6 devices that charge via USB-C. I have 4 of those chargers in a draw. That means 66% of the chargers I've bought will never likely be used & are just waiting to be toxic landfill. Governments are starting to recognise the problem
  • they hadn't started shipping them with only USB-C cables. I have plenty of USB charges, and exactly zero USB-C chargers. I doubt I'm the only one in that boat, or the only one who basically relied on new devices for new chargers.

    If you're going to change your charging standard, provide the new chargers you jerks!

  • Apple should just make a coupon for a $100 off an iPhone if you don't need and adapter.

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