Bjorn Le
Hobocop
How is that legal though, I would think that they would need to let you know that their updates were purposely slowing down your product which duped millions that do buy Apple phones, ino buying new ones or whatever.
I would think anyone that is affected by it, which is basically in that article anything made after Iphone 8 at this point (iPhone 7 Plus is also affected, what in the blue ****?). They damn well better offer better batteries to people using the damn phones. Because I left Samsung for ****ty service after the Note 7 debacle, now Iphone and this horse ****?
I wonder if Google Pixel 2 XL is the way to go.
It's definitely not legal, especially because it doesn't look they can even say "hey, it was in the update notes all along you just didn't bother to look." They actually slowed phones down and didn't tell people. I would imagine it was a closely guarded secret at Apple as well.
The excuse is complete bs given Apple is saying the batteries become defective over time. The logical response would be to admit the batteries only last 2-3 years, and that users should replace their battery or upgrade. It's not just anecdotal that people have upgraded because their phones have slowed down. Apple is going to be crucified, and rightfully so, over this.
Multiple class actions already filed in the US.