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Software Cellphones China The Courts

Samsung Faces Lawsuit In China Over Smartphone Bloatware 84

An anonymous reader writes: Samsung is being sued in China for installing too many apps onto its smartphones. The Shanghai Consumer Rights Protection Commission is also suing Chinese vendor Oppo, demanding that the industry do more to rein in bloatware. The group said complaints are on the rise from smartphone users who are frustrated that these apps take up too much storage and download data without the user being aware. Out of a study of 20 smartphones, Samsung and Oppo were found to be the worst culprits. A model of Samsung's Galaxy Note 3 contained 44 pre-installed apps that could not be removed from the device, while Oppo's X9007 phone had 71.
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Samsung Faces Lawsuit In China Over Smartphone Bloatware

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  • Thank God! (Score:5, Interesting)

    by war4peace ( 1628283 ) on Friday July 03, 2015 @11:11AM (#50039413)

    My S4 Mini has a crapton of preinstalled, irremovable apps I have no use for, nor do I intend to ever use.
    The worst thing was that there was some "update available" for some apps which required more rights and I never agreed to those updates, and I thought they would remain "stuck" on an older version. They didn't. After a few months I saw they got updated on my phone without me approving anything.
    TripAdvisor, looking at you!

    • Re:Thank God! (Score:4, Informative)

      by Anonymous Coward on Friday July 03, 2015 @01:13PM (#50039943)

      Android lets you disable preinstalled apps. This won't uninstall it and give you space back but it will at least disable the app from running, uninstall any updates for it beyond the original base app, and disable update for it all together.

      Not perfect and annoying having to do it one by one, but it is better then nothing.

      • I know about Disable function, it's a workaround but the issue remains, and that is: preinstalling an application that's not essential for my phone (e.g. phone is unusable without it), I don't need and didn't ask for, and which can't be uninstalled.

      • Re:Thank God! (Score:4, Insightful)

        by digitig ( 1056110 ) on Friday July 03, 2015 @02:07PM (#50040197)
        Not all preinstalled apps on my S4 mini can be disabled. And at random the phone pops up a screen asking me to approve an update to the Samsung software which I'm not willing to do because I'm not willing to concede the extra permissions it demands. Lots of the built-in apps won't work without the update, but they're apps I never use anyway. I'm worried it will catch me out one day by popping up the "OK" button right under where I was about to press. Time for me to root the phone, I suppose, but I cant find out how to do it for the build I have.
      • That's not true in all cases. I have disabled something called "Flipboard" several times on my Galaxy S3 and within the next day or two I get an update that re-enables it.

      • How do I do this thing? I can't find any such function on my Android phone, and I'd really like it.

      • Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • If a Tripadvisor app got installed that way, I would have thought that its requirements had been reduced to the rights it already had.

    • by sad_ ( 7868 )

      I hope in the meantime you installed another rom on it, i have a s4 mini as well and another rom (clean, without crapware) transformed the phone.
      Not only is it faster but the battery will last days!

      • Could you please point me to it? Last time I modded a phone was the HTC Desire S, about 3 years ago. I'm sure lots have changed since then and I'm willing to try this out, but I'm a newb and have no idea where to look.

  • by ArcadeMan ( 2766669 ) on Friday July 03, 2015 @11:12AM (#50039417)

    Once systemd assimilates all those apps, the number will be much lower.

  • I like it. (Score:3, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward on Friday July 03, 2015 @11:14AM (#50039433)

    Funny how when government runs a country, you get government looking out for people/consumers. When corporations runs a country, people/consumers get screwed! Examples: Comcast, AT&T, Sprint, and many others.

    • Re:I like it. (Score:4, Insightful)

      by Vermonter ( 2683811 ) on Friday July 03, 2015 @12:55PM (#50039865)
      Because a government would never use its powers to do something like illegally spy on its own citizens, or hold people in prison for years without trial... But please, tell me more about how you pay too much for your internet connection.
      • Rhetorical question begging to be asked: Which Government are you referring to, China or the United States?
      • by MrL0G1C ( 867445 )

        Er, are you talking about the US (ed snowden, nsa, guantanamo bay, man in prison whole life for shop-lifting as a teen) or China?

  • Went with the Nexus 6 right from the Google Play store.

    Sure you can root and remove them as I did on my Note 2. You can get cool custom ROMS even, but my Note 2 was still pretty powerful but ROM makers moved on and it was getting less and less support.

  • I have several apps on my Samsung Rugby I'll never use. Some are duplicates from Google, Samsung, and my service provider. Some are unremovable games (I don't play games on my phone). Facebook keeps trying to push it's crappy messenger at me that weighs in at over 20 meg, screw that. Options are good, as long as they are optional.

  • by Anonymous Coward

    The free hand of Capitalism should be able to install as much junk and spyware as possible.

  • by xiando ( 770382 ) on Friday July 03, 2015 @11:42AM (#50039539) Homepage Journal
    Bought a Q8H tablet from China & discovered that it came delivered with two types of very malicious malware (Trojan.coudw.a and another) built right into the factor ROM. If you remove it and do a factory reset then you get it back because it's right there in the NAND recovery image. Perhaps the Shanghai Consumer Rights Protection Commission could look into that since it appears to be a rather common problem.
    • And oddly, I somehow feel safer with the preinstalled Chinese malware vs. the preinstalled NSA malware. Really, it isn't the Chinese that are going to come knocking on my door. But alas, they probably share their data anyway, with some free-trade like spy agreement.

      • by KGIII ( 973947 )

        To be fair, and honest, the NSA (while detestable) is not going to come knocking on your door unless you are doing something horribly inappropriate according to their rules. I strongly suspect you are not doing anything that they care about. They, on the other hand, are doing something YOU care about and what they are doing is wrong. But, no... They are not going to come knocking on your door at this point in time. Not even if you are pirating software or music. Not even if you badmouth them online - NSA is

  • China does have some good points.

    [puts on nationalist 'murican hat] It's probably just a propaganda campaign to make the USA look bad

    [takes off hat] It's working.

  • You know something is wrong when you get a new phone, and the first thing you need to do is wipe the OS and install cyanogenmod just so the phone works properly.

    This of course assumes that there's a version of cyanogenmod for your phone.

    • that is just stupid. why not just get a nexus or iPhone?

      • Because maybe people just don't / didn't know? When buying a non-cheap product from a major company, one would expect that it's actually fit for purpose, and so it wouldn't even occur to them to ask.

        I got a Samsung Galaxy S3 cause everyone was raving about how awesome it was. Needless to say I was majorly pissed when I discovered what a steaming pile of crap it was. I've since switched the iOS, which I've had comparatively zero problems with, and am never touching an android device again.

  • Appropriate timing. Got 3 notifications from NFL Mobile yesterday. Thanks to whomever mentioned disabling above.

  • ...but is this something that should be sued over? It's not like the bloatware is harming anyone; it's just freaking annoying.

    I feel a company should have the right to choose whether or not to put bloatware on its devices, just like I have a right to avoid purchasing from that company because they're being retarded.
    • by HiThere ( 15173 )

      Why not? Suing them seems totally appropriate unless they are making adequate pre-purchase disclosure, and ensuring that the prospective purchaser is aware of the characteristics of the thing they are purchasing.

      Disagree? Re-read Adam Smith.

  • I see they mentioned User Dictionary right in the article. I consider User Dictionary to be malware.

    I have to lock my version of Google+ to the factory version or else User Dictionary gets stuck in such a tight crash-restart loop that it only yields to the GUI for a split second before presenting the crash dialog. It eats all battery capacity in a few hours while the phone is sitting completely idle.

    I have no idea what uses User Dictionary, but you certainly cannot disable it. Also, technically speaking, I

  • Maybe Microsoft will take the hint from this lawsuit and allow you to uninstall the built-in apps that come with Windows 10. Its great that they provide apps like "XBox" and "OneNote" gratis, but I've no interest in them and it bugs me that you can't uninstall them.

    Wait, there's a new release version of the Win10 Preview. Maybe that's one of the things they've changed.

    Nope, still can't uninstall. I guess Microsoft is really glued to the idea of making your desktop like a crappy smartphone...

I have hardly ever known a mathematician who was capable of reasoning. -- Plato

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