The latest patent from Apple reveals ways in which their products could be fitted with a simple label or tag that provides evidence of tampering. If the strip is compromised, it gives Apple leverage to void your warranty.
Apple’s patent application notes that it is in the best interest of an electronics manufacturer to be able to know when a device has been “compromised” and opened, thus voiding its warranty. Unauthorised tampering with an electronic device can destroy it, and without evidence of such tampering, a manufacturer may be obligated to support its warranty. Apple’s technology, the company said, could save manufacturers “substantial costs.
In another patent, Apple is looking to broaden the role of the accelerometer in it’s portable devices, noting that motion could be used to navigate and control the device itself. For example, users could shake the device to play a song or flick it to scroll through menus. That idea has been tossed around before as I recall, so it’s not really all that surprising. Perhaps its just a ploy to get us to buy more iPods as more movement will likely result in more drops, tosses and smashes. [Appleinsider]
Marty Askew
Friday, December 11, 2009 at 9:25 AMThia is another way for them to screw you. They didnt honor my iPhone warranty for a cracked case because they said it had been submerged. The the argument following, they wouldnt confirm if the high humidity in south east asia (where i was just holidaying) would trigger the sensors.
matt
Friday, December 11, 2009 at 6:20 PMhold up. are you saying they went out of their way to put a hardware sensor in there to detect if you’ve voided your warranty???
what apple person would ever want to tamper with their product anyway?
I mean on a scale of “tamperer” to “I-don’t-care-how-it-works-as-long-as-it-works” I would think apple people would be at the latter end. hell even non apple people who buy apple products would know the whole point of them is to not have to or want to tamper with them.
Anon
Friday, December 11, 2009 at 6:45 PMThey’re patenting decade-old technology now? Where DO they get there ideas?