25-07-2023
01:31 AM
- last edited
25-07-2023
02:54 PM
by
SereneH
So after the june/july updates, I have found 2 people I personally know that have the exact same problem as me and many many others that I've read on forums, I have the s21 ultra as does my cousin, who uses it for his surgery and my friend has a s21. The problem is the phone is restarting randomly, on all 3 phones the same bloody issue. I've spoken to samsung and they say it's a motherboard problem on mine and my cousins (LOL) funny it should happen straight after an update! They knew from the error reports apparently, so why is the updates causing motherboard issues??
26-07-2023 11:36 AM
26-07-2023 12:16 PM - last edited 26-07-2023 12:22 PM
01-08-2023 01:40 PM
Fascinating. And sad that you've had the experience you've had and feel the way you do.
Both my S10 along with my dad’s J6 are out of warranty and must’ve been somehow missed off Samsung’s alleged destructo-update list to force us to upgrade to the latest and greatest. I wonder how that happened? 🤨 Not as if we both aren’t known to Samsung – I work for them of course; and he regularly gets promo emails trying to persuade him to upgrade to the super-shiny new stuff. And we’re just the tip of a large iceberg of users of older devices that haven’t received an alleged planned kill switch. (Unless you mean that Samsung just had it in for you, your cousin, and your friend?)
Posting this from the 2018 Guardian article you linked to in another thread: https://www.theguardian.com/technology/2018/oct/24/apple-samsung-fined-for-slowing-down-phones:
'A Samsung spokesperson said the company was disappointed by the decision and intends to appeal the fine: “Samsung did not issue any software update that reduced the Galaxy Note 4’s performance. In contrast, Samsung has always released software updates enabling our customers to have the best experience possible.”'
Of course, that’s the intent from the Samsung side. Updates in the wild can and do go wrong in some cases; with a few variables at play (e.g. regional origin; network build/additions; user device setup; installed apps…). It’s one of the main reasons why we ask for all those error reports with software log files (and any supporting evidence demonstrating the issue if possible), for example: helps identify at which point something’s gone awry in that specific instance.
Generally speaking, the problem I’ve found with "conspiracy" theories is that they overestimate human intelligence whilst massively underestimating the capacity for human error. I’ve been around in the world enough to be able to confidently say that the vast majority of stuff going wrong or breaking happens not as a result of some dastardly plan, but as a result of physics, randomness, or because people make mistakes and/or are varying degrees of idiot at times.
Your theory also falls down as it works on the underlying assumption that it's a given at Samsung that anyone with a Samsung phone that's broken or otherwise gone wrong will automatically buy a new Samsung phone or get it repaired... which they don't – and Samsung, in fact, are fully aware of that. The investment into creating an extensive customer support system (of which this Community and its users is a small part of) is intended to help try to offset that movement towards another brand.
As for your apparent solution to it all: legal action might be the best for some and in some cases, but they’re not a magic bullet that cures all. From the cost, stress, uncertainty of outcome – sometimes it just doesn’t outweigh the alternatives.
Appreciate that things have gone wrong with your Samsung products – and if I could fix them for you I’d gladly do so. And I’m not going to dissuade you or anyone else from taking a legal action route if you really feel that’s the best way forwards for you in your situation. But please be aware that “Take them to court!” is not an answer to all problems or the one that all other Community users are seeking in other topics, and try to be smarter and more considerate in your contributions here.
Cheers.
01-08-2023 01:48 PM - last edited 01-08-2023 03:23 PM
02-08-2023 02:07 PM - last edited 02-08-2023 02:14 PM
Well, I can be ridiculous. 😉 But I'm trying to be more the voice of reason in this instance. You're going to need more than just numbers, posts on forums, and an angry attitude to win a court case against the might of a multinational Goliath like Samsung.
You’ve yet to put forward a plausible theory as to how Samsung would target only some of the devices in any particular product range with an intentional software kill switch, and how it affects differently in some of the cases that you've commented on.
You've not really answered how sabotaging possibly thousands of perfectly fine devices is a solid marketing strategy and surefire way to get people to buy Samsung again.
You've also assumed that updates are only worked on by Samsung, which very much isn't the case for Samsung's Android-based smartphones, smartwatches, and tablets. Android create the initial firmware, Samsung add their bit, the networks (if it's an LTE device) add their bit, and the whole thing then goes back and forth between them all a few times before release. So, are you sure that Samsung are the culprits?
And speaking of that, apart from the mentions of Apple and Samsung, you've largely overlooked that other manufacturers also have their share of issues after updates - which a visit to forums about their devices shows. Are they all intentionally sabotaging their products to make you buy their newer ones too?
07-08-2023 02:15 PM
07-08-2023 02:33 PM
@Scoobs222 wrote:
Where did I say every phone will be effected? That would be too blatant and samsung would go out of business within 3 months, you're just being ridiculous aren't you.. and if you read on this forum or reddit, it's CLEAR to see its not just me, my cousin and friend who's been effected is it, there's possibly thousands who've had this exact same issue so stop being so patronising and sarcastic. And that article was from 2018, a whole 5 years ago, samsung could easily mess up phones now but in another way.
And it wasn't just my phone, my watch 4 pro got BRICKED after an update, that's two devices worth thousands down the drain in a year and you think that's acceptable from a company like samsung? 👍 👍 👍
Adding this:
The Watch4 series runs on WearOS Powered by Samsung: https://www.samsung.com/uk/support/mobile-devices/wear-os/, which is firmware built by both Google and Samsung.
And is this the same Watch4 that you posted about in December last year where you said that you got it from eBay, couldn’t get hold of the original receipt as Proof of Purchase to verify a warranty claim to get it repaired, and accused Samsung of “pulling a fast one” for even making a request for that documentation?
@Scoobs222 wrote:
I sent my dead phone back and now they want to see proof of original purchase, I got it off ebay a year ago and its still in warranty, can you advice please? I can't get hold off original receipt. Thanks
If so, do you know that Watch4’s history prior to you getting it or even if it’s a genuine Samsung product?
And it appears you’re quite unlucky when it comes to your purchase documentation, as apparently you weren’t able to get your hands on it for your S7 Edge too back in 2018: https://eu.community.samsung.com/t5/other-smartphones/samsung-s7-edge-camera-malfunction/m-p/713312
Throwing insults at me and others won’t help. Your cousin’s legal team will ask you (and others) all of the questions I’ve asked in this topic too (and more) if they’re as decent a legal team as you claim, as they ought to anticipate that the ones they’ll need to face to prove the case.
The burden of proof is on the one making the argument. You’ve repeatedly accused Samsung of shady behaviour and intentionally breaking some of their products via software updates to make them unworkable in order to force people to buy the newest Samsung products. It’s up to you and your cousin’s legal team to prove that case: that it’s true and accurate, there’s intent and what the motivation and method for it is.
Apart from the online tantrum and insults, so far all you’ve shown here is:
Your argument here has more holes than a Tetley teabag.
Can’t say that you’ve filled me with any confidence that you and your cousin’s legal team could get success for me in court if I were someone whose product had gone wrong. And it would’ve been a fair amount of time and money of people’s that you’ll have wasted on something you promised but failed to deliver on too. Are you going to compensate them for it? Your track record of misplacing documentation and public instance of trying to twist it around to say that the other party is dodgy for even requesting it doesn’t really engender all that much trust that you’ll do right by folks.
You need to do better.
07-08-2023 05:24 PM
08-08-2023 12:45 PM - last edited 08-08-2023 12:59 PM
@Scoobs222 wrote:
But other devices aren't costing £1200 plus are they? If I'm paying premium prices I expect premium devices. If they're going to mess up like this after 2 years then there's no way they should be charging eat they are. Either way I will give samsung as much bad publicity as I possibly can. How else do would you explain this restart issue after update if it wasn't a samsung issue? Its definitely not an isolated case that's for sure! There's many many posts on here and reddit regarding this.. that's only the people that have bothered to to post about it!
As I said above, there can be a variety of factors that can cause something to go wrong in any given instance, and so investigation is needed and information gathered in order to determine the cause and resolution.
I could also add that even newly released products that cost north of £1000 can and do have things go wrong with them too. And even a casual observer can see that forums tend to be very active with all sorts of issues and queries just after a product release when people get them in hand - especially premium/flagship products such as the various S, Note, or Z ranges; or even other brand devices. They're also usually the most intensively active in the following few weeks/months. So, are Samsung deliberately breaking their newly released products to force people to buy their newly released products too?
‘Things going wrong = definite sabotage to force people to buy new’ doesn’t logically follow or is evidentially true.
You've taken things going wrong, leapt to a conclusion, and repeatedly accused Samsung of being underhand and of intentional product sabotage for the purposes of forcing people to buy newer Samsung products. It’s all a bit bizarre… until someone reads your posting history here and discovers your rather strange take on what “sly, sneaky, scamming” behaviour is.
Who is more likely to be “pulling a fast one”?
Or:
I think most would agree that, for example, an insurance company or a government department requesting proof and documentation for verification of something isn’t in any way doing anything shady; but rather that someone who’s accusing them of that probably has something to hide and is angry about being prevented from fraudulent or dishonest behaviour. Not necessarily saying that you are being fraudulent or dishonest, but it is very odd that you’d frame a perfectly reasonable request the way you did, and then go on to leap to a conclusion and further accusations along the same lines that the same organisation is “sly, sneaky scammers”.
08-08-2023 01:00 PM