Gag Order Clause Comes Back To Bite Apple In 'Exploding' iPod Case
from the ah-the-legalese dept
We've been getting a bunch of submissions from people about a Times Online story concerning Apple's supposed attempt at "gagging" someone who had their iPod explode. The company agreed to give a replacement, but the terms of the deal made them agree never to talk about it. While this may seem draconian, I'm going to give Apple the benefit of the doubt here: this is pretty standard legal language on such things. I had a laptop whose hard drive died 5 times in six months a few years back, and when the manufacturer finally agreed to replace the laptop (after multiple escalations of the issue), it had a nearly identical clause. But, it was pretty straightforward. Before faxing the agreement back to the company, I just crossed out the clause that said I was barred from ever talking about it, and the guy from the company called me immediately and said: "I see you crossed it out -- our lawyers won't like it, but that's fine, I just want to get you a new machine." Who knows if Apple would be so accommodating, but I think this story is blown a bit out of proportion. This kind of language is standard legalese, rather than some nefarious attempt by Apple to shut up those who have had their iPods explode. Still, the fact that this clause is suddenly generating press attention should put corporate lawyers on warning. These standard clauses are PR nightmares waiting to happen. Take them out of such "replacement" agreements, or be ready to see a similar story appear in the press soon...Thank you for reading this Techdirt post. With so many things competing for everyone’s attention these days, we really appreciate you giving us your time. We work hard every day to put quality content out there for our community.
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Filed Under: gag order, ipods, replacements
Companies: apple
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As to crossing lines out of a contract, you also have to cross out the part of the contract that says you can't cross lines out of the contract--and keep a copy. Companies may claim that crossing out those lines invalidates the contract in future and demand whatever compensation or remediation they gave you back, saying that the corporation did not agree to the terms.
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I got a Gigabyte motherboard, the GA-MA74GM-S2 ( http://www.gigabyte.com.tw/Products/Motherboard/Products_Overview.aspx?ProductID=2813 ) and about a week or two after I got it it stopped reading data from drives correctly (CD's and hard drives) from the IDE port. I tried Sata using an adapter and same thing. The data was read correctly via USB (if I used an adapter) with the same CD roms and the same hard drives and the same CD roms read the same CD's correctly on other computers. I called them and they said upgrade the firmware. I did. Still didn't fix the problem. I called them again and they said to send it to them. I did. They sent it back and they didn't fix the problem. I give up, I won't keep hassling with it. It came with a motherboard/processor combo from Fry's and I didn't want to take it back there because I wanted the processor. Now I'm stuck with a useless motherboard.
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Exploding iPods
The problem is that we are creating batteries with higher and higher energy densities. Well, that's a good thing, really, 'cause we won't have to recharge so often, and it's probably better for the environment. But with high energy densities comes an increasing danger of rapid overheating and venting (explosion). The fact that the iPod in the original story was dropped before it "exploded" leads me to believe that the battery got shorted when the unit was dropped, and the subsequent rapid release of energy could not be contained by the enclosure.
Personally, I wouldn't be too quick to let Apple off the hook on this one. They know the total energy of the batteries in their designs, so they should build an enclosure that could contain a catastrophic short. Instead, they try to quash the occasional customer that has problems. Just wait 'til something like this brings down a jetliner (God-forbid), and then there will be congressional inquiries and lawsuits galore. And then the new iPods will weigh 10 pounds with all that armor.
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Re: Re:
I mean getting burned like that must hurt.
No...it megahertz...
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Hey Mike
You got a lemon, meaning, it stopped working a few times and didn't explode with its acid going everywhere.
She got a product that exploded with acid inside it, a much different 'lemon' kind of experience.
Seem to be very different circumstances leading to the same place.
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apple can eat my shit
personally, i can't wait until apt (or a similar system) makes it to android for native apps (yes, i know you can run debian on android). then you just edit your repo list and you're golden. things would show up in your apt-cache and it transparently gives you the path of least resistance.
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re: android
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Who is the clause for?
But if the customer happens to be a lawyer then that could be a whole different game. These kinds of agreements are written for lawyers.
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Re: apple can eat my shit
173,000,000 iPods sold. One blows up. Better odds this happening than being struck by lightning, or winning both Megabucks and Powerball jackpots on the same day.
I'll take Apple's odds.
Stay Thirsty, My Friend.
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Re: Re: Re:
Megahertz. Sounds I believe that rhymes with the sound of my hand backslapping your face.
Stay Thirsty, My Friend.
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Re: apple can eat my shit
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Out of Warranty iPod
So....
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Re: Re: apple can eat my shit
i couldn't care about the damage the device causes (fuck, you clean it up and file an RMA). what i'm up in arms about is the fact that they don't want you to talk about their product being defective. that's a load of shit, and apple deserves every ounce of bad will for making such an outrageous demand. also, this is NOT standard for warranty issues. IBM and Dell have never demanded anything like this and i've done business with them many times (business and personal).
and if apple is doing this with NDAs, you have no idea what the defect rates on these are. you don't even supply an estimated failure rate (because you're full of shit... typical anecdotal moron mentality) and apple was gaming the system to prevent people from making requests on failure rates (RTFA... it says this in the paragraph just above where you pulled the 173m figure).
as for worthlessness, the fact that 2 of your 5 last comments are solely "Hmm." says wonders about how valuable your amazing commentary is. Another 1 is solely what you used as a sig in another, and it also begins with "Hmm." You're at 60% worthlessness and that's ignoring your unfunny joke and your completely unsupported attack on me. grab a spoon because i've left a shitpile for you to share with apple.
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You should always read more than one source
http://www.tuaw.com/2009/08/03/apple-most-assuredly-not-slapping-family-with-gagging-order -ov/
Also I find it quite intriguing that another Apple article is getting major press today.
A commenter 3 days ago, Number 27 and 28: http://techdirt.com/articles/20090731/1748485734.shtml
Also noticed that for some strange reason every little thing Apple has recently done is all over the blogosphere, and repeated everywhere with sensational headlines. If you dig deep enough you will notice that the majority of the stories pull only from one source. This is not true for the Google Voice issue, and it has been revealed that it was definitely AT&T's doing and not Apple's.
http://www.seankovacs.com/index.php/2009/07/apple-admits-att-pulled-all-gv-apps/
But these stories, the rebuttals, if you will, are not spread so wildly about but have just as much or even more information than the original articles.
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Re: You should always read more than one source
http://www.tuaw.com/2009/08/03/apple-most-assuredly-not-slapping-family-with-gagging-order -ov/
Hmm. That article basically repeats exactly what we wrote. That this wasn't a big deal, but standard legal language. I'm not sure what your point is.
Also I find it quite intriguing that another Apple article is getting major press today.
A commenter 3 days ago, Number 27 and 28: http://techdirt.com/articles/20090731/1748485734.shtml
Um. We also post pro Apple stories too. We talk about the action, not the company.
If you dig deep enough you will notice that the majority of the stories pull only from one source.
What? What source would that be?!?
This is not true for the Google Voice issue, and it has been revealed that it was definitely AT&T's doing and not Apple's.
Actually, AT&T came out today and denied they had anything to do with it.
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Guantanamo
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Re: Re: You should always read more than one source
As far as Apple getting an unusual amount of press lately, I specifically mentioned post number 28, along with 27 because the articles he listed are all non-Techdirt articles. I took that specific action to mean he wasn't referring to Techdirt posting anti-Apple news all over the web, but that certain news sites and blogs were going crazy about the same things.
Lastly, in my experience with any service provider, they will always point the finger of blame at anyone but themselves. My favorite example was the Lotus Notes/Comcast fiasco.
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Re: You should always read more than one source
I find it intriguing that any time more than one ad thats even remotely bad about Apple shows up, people assume its a conspiracy. Get a grip, maybe the company you so thoroughly love and try to protect is actually just like any other company.
Every little thing, good or bad, is all over the blogosphere. If people are going to post articles every other second about how awesome the iPhone is, you can expect the same thing when the company does something stupid. Yea, it may be standard legalese for some companies, but nonetheless, its still stupid and people finally brought it to the world's attention that companies are doing this.
Apple got more coverage on the week leading up to AND on the day the Pre was released. I didn't hear you complaining about it then.
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Re: Hey Mike
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Re: Re: apple can eat my shit
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Re: Exploding iPods
See: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=odxR1lkfiEI&eurl=http://www.utahflyers.org/index.php%3Foption%3Dc om_content%26task%3Dview%26id%3D21%26Itemid%3D28&feature=player_embedded
People don't want to carry around heavy bulky devices (thats partly why we moved away from NiCad and NiMh batteries), I think you will be hard pressed to find a portable device that can really contain the massive amounts of energy, mainly because it will weigh 10 pounds. there are other mediums that somewhat protect that are lighter called "LiPo Sacks" which at the scale of an Ipod or Iphone might help reduce venting.
Instead of trying to contain the venting, giving users more of warning would be easily posssible. These batterys often "Puff up" before they vent / explode, If manufacturers allowed users more access to the batteries a panel could pop out and the user would know that something bad was about to happen.
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being a jerk is standard?
I am not saying that Apple is any worst than the next guy, just that we should be pissed at all of them, not excepting.
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If you answer yes, then please go ahead and feel that righteous indignation. The rest, stfu.
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Re: re: android
there's a checkbox that says "do not allow unsigned apps".
uncheck it, and install whatever the heck you want. Problem is, you still have to root your phone to get some stuff because tmobile is blocking things from the G1. *THAT* is different.
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Re: being a jerk is standard?
Um. Did I say it was ok? No. I said: "the fact that this clause is suddenly generating press attention should put corporate lawyers on warning. These standard clauses are PR nightmares waiting to happen. Take them out of such "replacement" agreements, or be ready to see a similar story appear in the press soon..."
It helps to read the post you're bashing before you start bashing.
My point was that this wasn't some special case, as implied by many commenting on this. But that doesn't make it ok, and I didn't say it was ok.
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Apple must make ipod safe for the users
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Gag Order Clause Comes Back To Bite Apple In 'Exploding' iPod Case
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Exploding case
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