Leaked Contract Shows Samsung Forces Repair Shop To Snitch On Customers (404media.co) 34
Speaking of Samsung, samleecole shares a report about the contract the South Korean firm requires repair shops to sign: In exchange for selling them repair parts, Samsung requires independent repair shops to give Samsung the name, contact information, phone identifier, and customer complaint details of everyone who gets their phone repaired at these shops, according to a contract obtained by 404 Media. Stunningly, it also requires these nominally independent shops to "immediately disassemble" any phones that customers have brought them that have been previously repaired with aftermarket or third-party parts and to "immediately notify" Samsung that the customer has used third-party parts.
"Company shall immediately disassemble all products that are created or assembled out of, comprised of, or that contain any Service Parts not purchased from Samsung," a section of the agreement reads. "And shall immediately notify Samsung in writing of the details and circumstances of any unauthorized use or misappropriation of any Service Part for any purpose other than pursuant to this Agreement. Samsung may terminate this Agreement if these terms are violated."
"Company shall immediately disassemble all products that are created or assembled out of, comprised of, or that contain any Service Parts not purchased from Samsung," a section of the agreement reads. "And shall immediately notify Samsung in writing of the details and circumstances of any unauthorized use or misappropriation of any Service Part for any purpose other than pursuant to this Agreement. Samsung may terminate this Agreement if these terms are violated."
Snitches get stitches (Score:5, Interesting)
Or in this case, they may get lawsuits.
-Performing un-authorized disassembly of customer property (which the customer can allege resulted in increased repair charges or damage to customer property) is a lawsuit waiting to happen.
-Violation of customer privacy by reporting to an unaffiliated third party is a lawsuit waiting to happen (unlikely to succeed unless class action or as an attorney general action).
Even if unsuccessful, lawsuits can be expensive to defend against.
Sounds like a bad idea.
Milton would burn down the building. (Score:3)
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Our society would totally collapse if there were more than a handful of guys like that.
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I still catch myself thinking that we should try it.
Re:Milton would burn down the building. (Score:4, Insightful)
Don't, it would make you an opportunist.
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Don't worry, they'll put all this in the agreement you sign before handing over your phone.
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Re: SNITCH ON? (Score:2)
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Remember that from SamsungÃ(TM)s perspective, using unauthorised parts IS wrong.
Remember from a consumer's point of view, that is a lot of bullshit. The headline fellates Samsung and disrespects the user.
The word snitch is completely accurate from SamsungÃ(TM)s point of view.
Yeah, what we need is more articles written from the point of view of corporations! There aren't enough of those!
Cuck.
Re: SNITCH ON? (Score:2)
In my fantasies, people stop worshipping corporations.
This answers the question (Score:5, Interesting)
iFixIt left lingering when they announced earlier today they would discontinue their partnership with Samsung [ifixit.com]. And now we know why.
Violation of Privacy opens Samsung to Class-Action (Score:4, Interesting)
Litigation.
Samsung is asking to be slapped.
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Or, in Canada, criminal charges for malicious destruction of property
https://www.criminal-code.ca/criminal-code-of-canada-section-430-1-mischief/index.
Not so much really (Score:1)
This happened years ago but you do still see class action lawsuits because the law doesn't apply to anything that happened before the law was passed and there's plenty of that floating around and t
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Frankly, I don't believe this. You are going to have to point at the specific Federal law and Supreme Court ruling that established all this, because you haven't provided any particulars.
Many questions (Score:2)
This seems reasonable for warranty work. Are we seeing the right interpretation?
Has any shop actually done the destruction part? Great way to get your local reputation reked and go out of business.
Isn't the broad interpretation wildly illegal in the EU?
I guess that the overall intent is to discourage any repair so people to buy a new phone.
I haven't had one since their bootloaders were cryptolocked. Many better options.
Re:Many questions (Score:5, Insightful)
Even if it was about warranty work its not reasonable, would would be reasonable is to say its not covered by the warranty not disassemble the phone.
Unbelievable! (Score:4)
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Being a monopoly in Korea, it is clear that they must have gotten this monopolistic idea from elsewhere.
Over-reaction? (Score:2)
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How about "No"?
Related to this - a car dealer/manufacturer shall not care about if I install aftermarket equipment that's not of their brand on my car - or replace the windscreen with a cheaper one because the original was damaged. This is the analogy.
If it's a warranty issue then it's another matter, but then any aftermarket equipment has to be proven that it has interfered.
uh yea (Score:5, Insightful)
I love the notion that little innocent jenny happened to drop her phone and what not, but I have worked in the repair world before and there's only so many times the same damn thing comes in with the same damn problem with different parts installed.
I learned this in high school working a summer job at a ma-pa computer shop. Some lady bought a reasonably powerful machine to run like 3d landscape architect or something. Came back a few days later "video card is not working" all irate and shit. It should have been like a Ge-Force 256 and would come back with a SIS pci card, her son said we were screwing her over!
After the 3rd fucking time I soldered that damn thing to the case and used a tamer resistant screw, never saw her again ... her son was probably stealing the cards for his buddies or to pay for drugs... you better believe we had a record of her
Good to know (Score:3)
Now I will never buy a phone from Samsung. Not that I am tempted. I currently use a Fairphone and that means I can repair myself whatever I like and I can get a build-image for the Android on it.
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You shouldn't have been tempted anyway. What Samsung does to Android is make it harder to use and less reliable. They are basically trying to make it into iOS. Vanilla Android is twice as good as either. I was afraid Lenovo would fuck up Moto but as it turns out they have been faithful, you get a phone with nothing unusual on it except for Moto Actions, which is great. Samsung is best thought of as a company which manufactures incendiaries.
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Good to know. Thanks.
And this is why. (Score:2)
Got that, Louis? (Score:1)
In which territories? (Score:1)
Article from a quick skim talks about USA only.
I wonder if theyâ(TM)re attempting something like this in the EU, but it would be stupid, because GDPR would bite them badly.