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Settlement Good News for MotorolaV710 Owners

bluebanzai writes "When hordes of people bought up the Motorola V710 upon its release a year ago, Slashdot readers may remember many impressive features including the cutting edge Bluetooth features (picture/mp3 transfer, wireless syncing) as described on Motorola's website. However, when used with the popular Verizon Wireless cell phone service provider, many Bluetooth features were sadly crippled (apart from a wireless headset) because OBEX features had been purposely disabled by Verizon. Hundreds of people donated to a hacker rewards program to unlock the full features of the phone to the tune of $3000, but was never fully successful. Well, one year later, the Los Angeles Superior Court (PDF Warning) and Verizon have announced the initial steps of a Class Action Lawsuit that appears to be influenced by the user community allowing everyone who bought it before the start of 2005 a few options for compensation--including a refund up to the purchase price of another phone which, interestingly enough, is a lot easier to hack."

6 of 210 comments (clear)

  1. How about... by aussie_a · · Score: 5, Insightful

    including a refund up to the purchase price of another phone which, interestingly enough, is a lot easier to hack.

    How about Verizon just stop crippling their customers and unlock the locked features?

  2. thats the problem with US phone networks by riflemann · · Score: 5, Insightful

    This seems to be a unique problem to US mobile phone markets. Why the hell do they require the phone company's own phone?

    In any other part of the world, you buy your own phone from wherever you choose (even another country) and just plug in a sim card from your chosen provider and it just works.

    If any provier here tried to pull those tricks, the market would take care of the problem very quickly.

    Is GSM actually getting any foothold in the US market?

  3. I got the mailling by bblazer · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I bought 2 of these phones from Verizon and was so upset with the situation I cancelled the service even-though I had to eat the cancellation fee. In the settlement mailing there are 3 options.

    1) Current Verizon customers that want to keep the phone and the service may get a $25 credit to their bill.

    2) Current customers who want to keep their service but not their phone may send it in for a refund.

    3) Customers who cancelled their service and paid the cancellation fee can get a refund of the fee.

    I am not sure why they just don't enable OBEX?! That is what everyone wanted in the first place.

    --
    My .bashrc can beat up your .bashrc!
  4. Greed IS Verizon's business model by digitaldc · · Score: 3, Insightful

    "Q. Well, these features are available in phones from many other carriers, and people feel cheated.
    A. Verizon does business unlike any other carrier, and we make no apologies for that. ... [Those features] don't work with our business model. Every customer is certainly entitled to their own feelings. "

    'we make no apologies for that' =Translation= We do what we want, when we want, and you do not matter.
    'don't work with our business model' =Translation= It is much more profitable for us this way
    'Every customer is certainly entitled to their own feelings.' =Translation= F You!!!

    --
    He who knows best knows how little he knows. - Thomas Jefferson
  5. Re:T-Mobile and Motorola by jhsiao · · Score: 3, Insightful
    Oh please. The reason we're being treated as a third world country in tech is because the majority of folks in the US won't buy anything until it's at third world prices...

    Do you shop at Walmart, Target, Old Navy? Do you scour fatwallet or slickdeals? Do you shop for the cheapest broadband service? Well, why then would a manufacturer waste storeshelf space on really expensive stuff when you only buy cheap crap?

    Showing prices after mailin rebates work in the US for a reason...because most people focus on price. Price at any cost. Maybe not you, maybe not me, but the majority of Americans, yes. Remember, this is the home of the Big Gulp and Costco. Where more=cheaper=better.

    So if you're one of the rare Americans that buy high-quality stuff at high prices, then you shouldn't care that Verizon or Cingular doesn't offer some high-end phones. Go and buy your Bang and Olfsen CD case. Nor should you care that some Japanese import game isn't available in the US. You just buy them from some of the many numerous online vendors that sell them. And you buy your phone without the subsidy lock or your import PS2 without the discounts that come with volume. But since you don't care about price, you'll pay that right?

    Until the market starts buying expensive phones (which the manufacturers would love to sell, by the way), the carriers won't waste the effort trying to sell them. When you see regular Americans (not early adopters) routinely pay $400 for a phone, carriers will be happy to offer that model.

    You want to know where we beat virtually everyone else in the modern world? Gasoline prices (no taxes), SUV choices (cheap gas), home square footage (suburb living), grain production (subsidized farming). Folks paying $10/gallon find it annoying we complain so loudly about $3/gallon.

    Do you really feel that bad that your fellow Americans don't have the option to buy some phone that you like? Or are you really upset that the majority of Americans don't feel as passionate about tech as you do and so you can't get a discount on your niche-market phone?

    Welcome to slashdot.

  6. Re:The MONOPOLY industry. by Eunuchswear · · Score: 4, Insightful
    Being a yurpeen I don't understand this bit:


    The phone would not sell because the carriers would not activate it for you because it is not one of their phones.


    Where I come from the carrier doesn't "activate" the phone. I just bung my SIM chip in and use it.

    Isn't it funny that your free market has produced monopolies that screw the customer and our regulated one has produced competition?
    --
    Watch this Heartland Institute video