Verizon Changes Its Mind and Will Kill Samsung's Galaxy Note 7 on January 5th (theverge.com)
Verizon has just announced that it plans to roll out Samsung's upcoming Note 7 update, which permanently stops the recalled smartphone from charging and disables its wireless radios, on January 5th. Only last week, the leading US carrier took a controversial stance when it said it would "not be taking part in this update because of the added risk this could pose to Galaxy Note 7 users that do not have another device to switch to." From a report on The Verge: The company was particularly concerned about nuking the Note 7 during the holiday travel season, something that its US rivals also seemed to take into consideration when scheduling a roll-out date for the update. AT&T is waiting until the very same day. Sprint will release it on January 8th. And T-Mobile's going first among major US carriers on December 27th. Verizon still seems to think it's making the right decision pushing things off a bit for the same reasons. "We want to make sure you can contact family, first responders, and emergency medical professionals during the holiday travel season."
It's dead, get your money back and get something else. I can't imagine anyone wanting to cling onto this burning POS.
Harrison's Postulate - "For every action there is an equal and opposite criticism"
The holiday season was part of their reasoning. It was obvious that they were going to kill it after the season.
This is a serious issue with CDMA Carriers that GSM carriers do not have. USian CDMA Users (Sprint, Verizon, and their Virtual Operators) have no SIM cards to pull from their devices. These people can't just pull a SIM out and put it in another device. Issues like this are why Canada is discontinuing all CDMA as of January 1st 2017.
Killing off the phone before christmas would have done nothing but cause a whole whackton of frustration and resentment. Killing it off after christmas, when a number of people would have gotten new devices anyway, makes much more sense.
I get that they don't want to turn off the phone because some people may not have access to another phone to call for emergency services, but how are those people going to call for emergency services when their Galaxy Note 7 starts a house fire?
This really is a damned if you do, damned if you don't situation.
"Grab them by the pussy" -- President of the United States of America
They just need to make sure they keep it charged on one of those cheapo knockoff Qi quick car chargers. Can't let that incendiary grenade defuse itself.
Does it really? Too many will illegally fly with it, very possibly risking an incident at 35,000 ft. Is it worth that risk?
I think verizon realized they have to limit their liability.
It was acting like a retailer stopping a recall - "but we can't make people return their faulty Fisher-Price flamethrowers because..... it's Christmas!!"
I wanted to use my Note 7 as a rechargeable handwarmer, you insensitive clods!
As a previous Note 7 owner who swapped out already, you shouldn't be able to force a product recall. It's really up to the person that purchased the device.
They've done a great job making it clear the device is defective. I think people who still have a Note 7 are aware and it's entirely their choice to keep the device if they wish.
Pull the SIM card, root the device, remove auto update mechanisms and continue on.
Yep... not even an owner of one, but this just goes to show. F*ck Samsung, the owner is the owner... the owner gets to make any and every decision about their device.
Digital is, by definition, imperfect. Analog is the way to go.
Your continued use of a known defective product constitutes a public health hazard. I imagine Samsung is perfectly happy to be sued by you, an individual property owner, rather than accept the ongoing risk of being sued by an airline, movie theater, etc. By the way, your lawsuit against Samsung would fail, for the following reason:
This is analogous to restricting free speech by declaring it illegal to yell 'Fire!' in a crowded movie theater. Yes, you are free say anything you want, but not when your free speech jeopardizes the well-being of those around you. Should your phone burst into flames in a movie theater, you place everyone at risk. Samsung & Verizon are doing the right thing.
"Every time I see an adult on a bicycle, I no longer despair for the future of the human race." - H. G. Wells
It seems strange to me that the carrier has the capability to control this. The update would be pushed from the manufacturer, not by the carrier. Unless they installed a special firmware that uses different update servers, which seems to be the case here. My question is if all the US carriers do this, since most commenters seems to think this is perfectly normal.
One of their more insightful legal types told them who would be at fault if another one caught fire.
Especially since Samsung did their part to limit any further injuries.
Looks like there will be some extra fireworks on New Years Eve, after all!
Call me dumb for asking, but I don't own a smart phone...
If the phone was made by Samsung, why do they need to have Verizon update the firmware? Doesn't the manufacturer have the ability to do this to a phone they made themselves? Are they contractually bound so that the ISP has to approve each system update?
> They've done a great job making it clear the device is defective. I think people who still have a Note 7 are aware and it's entirely their choice to keep the device if they wish.
This is great solace to someone whose apartment burns down because there's a Note 7 charging next door. And I'm sure whoever decides to keep the device has fully indemnified Samsung for any damages that may come from the defect.
I'm not saying that they should be able to force the recall necessarily-- just that the issue is a little more complicated than informed consent.
"make sure you can contact family, first responders, and emergency medical professionals"
How nice , of course they do --- so that you may call your family and first responders after the phone catches fire and you're about to die !!!
Damn, I never have mod points when I want them!
This comment is my opinion and does not represent an official position of Donald Trump or others I do not work for
Yep... not even an owner of one, but this just goes to show. F*ck Samsung, the owner is the owner... the owner gets to make any and every decision about their device.
For that to be a reality you would have to absolve Samsung of liability for any and all damages caused by their product. Is that really what you want? You can't have it both ways.
J
... use another device, even a cheapy burner...
Why settle for a cheapy burner when you have an expensive burner?