What are you talking about ?
You do not have 2 year manufacturer warranty.
You have 1 year manufacturer and 1 extra year from the seller (store).
So when buying in an Apple store is is dishonest to say the product is only covered for one year.
What are you talking about ?
You do not have 2 year manufacturer warranty.
You have 1 year manufacturer and 1 extra year from the seller (store).
Lawyers just love to sue Apple because Apple has money, that's all there is to this.
So when buying in an Apple store is is dishonest to say the product is only covered for one year.
This is simply wrong. If my headphone jack breaks after the year period is over I state in my complaint that the product is quite simply 'not fit for purpose'. A product should be able to be used as intended for a reasonable period of time. If Apple object I bring in the Office of Fair Trade (UK example). I can assure you I will get my product replaced or repaired under my two year warranty.
Apple is fighting the 2-year warranty in the EU because they would then have to offer it everywhere. Which they should. The 1-year is really tacky, always seemed beneath Apple really.
But Apple do misrepresent it when selling products. Particularly in the stores. They often claim that without Apple care, a one-year warranty is all you can expect.
This is simply not true - and does not match EU law.
Please go read:
http://ec.europa.eu/consumers/ecc/consumer_topics/buying_goods_services_en.htm
"The 2-year guarantee is an EU-wide minimum, and the laws in some EU countries may offer you longer limitation periods.
[!] In some countries, once the first 6 months of the two-year guarantee period have passed, you may need to prove that the product was faulty or not as advertised when you received it, if the seller contests this. In some countries, there are also deadlines for contacting the seller after discovering the defect."
This is the important part that shops use to get away with it. You need to prove that it was faulty when you BOUGHT it.
But, again, this is all me hearing 3rd party arguments on message boards, which is of course, the gospel.![]()
Wrong. First, there is no such thing as EU law; each member state incorporates EU directives into its own legislation however it sees fit. Second, the EU has issued a directive over a minimum consumer guarantee. Guarantees and warranties are two completely different things. Guarantees typically give a lesser service than a warranty. There is no automatic right to any warranty - any you get is a bonus, most are paid for (Applecare, Squaretrade, extended warranties etc).
The other important part is that it is a guarantee. Guarantees are only available from the retailer. You have no automatic right to a warranty, which is usually available from the manufacturer, with whom you have no contract.
Wrong. First, there is no such thing as EU law; each member state incorporates EU directives into its own legislation however it sees fit. Second, the EU has issued a directive over a minimum consumer guarantee. Guarantees and warranties are two completely different things. Guarantees typically give a lesser service than a warranty. There is no automatic right to any warranty - any you get is a bonus, most are paid for (Applecare, Squaretrade, extended warranties etc).
The other important part is that it is a guarantee. Guarantees are only available from the retailer. You have no automatic right to a warranty, which is usually available from the manufacturer, with whom you have no contract.
Just raise prices to include all the warranty stuff. Continued support costs money and it has to be paid for some how. People want the support, they better be ready to pay it.
We already pay for it. Haven't you heard, Apple has the biggest profit margins in history.
We already pay for it. Haven't you heard, Apple has the biggest profit margins in history.
So if I ran my business in the EU, I'd have to offer an additional warranty past one year of the manufacturer just because I am selling it? How can small businesses survive this requirement? I would never open a business in the EU for any products subject to this law.
Only large businesses can afford to offer such warranty and this screws over small businesses.
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So if I ran my business in the EU, I'd have to offer an additional warranty past one year of the manufacturer just because I am selling it? How can small businesses survive this requirement? I would never open a business in the EU for any products subject to this law.
Only large businesses can afford to offer such warranty and this screws over small businesses.
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No, they don't and who is to say what their margins should be?
I wouldn't purchase any product of your company anyway if you are not confident enought in your product to at least give out a 2 year warranty...
And that's the whole point why consumers are upset about Apple (besides Apple purposefully screwing them over, with not correctly stating what warranty they have): Apple wants us to believe they sell premium products and ask a lot of money for it. I would at least expect them to proudly announce their products are so superior that they'll have a 2 year warranty everywhere, yet Apple just maximizes margins, but screwing customers over...it's becoming harder and harder to support Apple
So if I ran my business in the EU, I'd have to offer an additional warranty past one year of the manufacturer just because I am selling it? How can small businesses survive this requirement? I would never open a business in the EU for any products subject to this law.
Only large businesses can afford to offer such warranty and this screws over small businesses.
You'd survive by raising your prices to cover the additional costs.
If Europeans really love this law, so be it. But please stop complaining that you pay higher prices than in the US.
Just to be clear here: The manufacturer is under no obligation to provide any warranty to end users / consumers (unless, of course, they acted as seller of their goods themselves). That means Apple is not required to provide any (manufacturer's) warranty by law if they didn't sell the device to the consumer.So if I ran my business in the EU, I'd have to offer an additional warranty past one year of the manufacturer
Quite simple: By charging your customers more for your products. That fact that any seller, including your competitors, has to abide by the law, in effect levels the playing field.just because I am selling it? How can small businesses survive this requirement?
You might have a claim against your supplier that allows you to fulfill warranty obligations.How can small businesses survive this requirement?
When is Apple going to learn that screwing over its customers is bad business?
How exactly?
So they're supposed to say "if this breaks down, you have a 2 year warranty with the seller, but you need to prove there was an inherent fault if it breaks after 6 months" when you buy something.
No they love to sue Apple because Apple constantly tries to pass off the the poor customer protection services in the US in the EU.
Your buried chart may offer more detail but Apple UK are still trying to gloss over the warranty details.
http://store.apple.com/uk/product/APPLECAREMBP-102583/applecare-protection-plan-for-macbook-pro
Notice how they use the exact same simplified graphic for both and how in the UK version it does not reflect the warranty situation at all?
And in the case of iPhone Apple UK are basically trying to sell you the warranty coverage you get for free.
http://store.apple.com/uk/product/MC265ZM/A/app-for-iphone?fnode=4e
Nowhere on that page does it say that the second year is covered by the store.