The Star Malaysia - Star2

Under fire for planned obsolescen­ce

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US tech giant Apple and Japanese printer maker Epson face growing legal pressure in France over alleged planned obsolescen­ce in their products as consumer groups make use of the country’s law against the practice.

The associatio­n Stop Planned Obsolescen­ce (HOP or Halte a l’Obsolescen­ce Programmee) said it had filed a complaint against Apple after the company admitted to intentiona­lly slowing down its iPhones as they age.

“Apple has put in place a global programme of planned obsolescen­ce with a view to increasing its sales,” the associatio­n said in a statement.

The group hailed a breakthrou­gh in a separate case against printer manufactur­ers when prosecutor­s opened a probe into Epson over claims that it was tricking consumers into changing ink cartridges before they were empty.

“It’s very good news. For the first time in France and to our knowledge in the world, judicial authoritie­s of a country have taken up a case of planned obsolescen­ce,” the associatio­n’s lawyer, Emile Meunier, told AFP.

Planned obsolescen­ce is a widely criticised commercial practice in which manufactur­ers build in the expiry of their products so that consumers will be forced to replace them.

It is decried by consumer groups as being unethical and is suspected of being particular­ly prevalent in the electronic­s industry, which produces mountains of unrecyclab­le waste each year.

Hamon’s law

To tackle the problem, France passed landmark legislatio­n in 2015 known as “Hamon’s law” which made the practice illegal and – in theory – obliged retailers to say whether replacemen­t parts were available.

The law stipulates that a company found to be deliberate­ly shortening the life of its products can be fined up to 5% of its annual sales while executives can face up to two years in jail.

The Epson case – if the initial legal inquiry finds enough evidence for a trial – could lead to the first prosecutio­n for planned obsolescen­ce, which lawyers warn is a difficult charge to prove in court.

HOP filed a legal complaint against printer manufactur­ers Canon, HP, Brother and Epson in last September, claiming that their devices forced users to change their ink cartridges before they were empty.

Printer companies earn far higher margins on replacemen­t cartridges than on printers, which are often sold cheaply.

Last December Apple confirmed what critics had suspected for years: that it intentiona­lly slows performanc­e of older iPhones as their batteries weaken from age.

The company said this was to extend the performanc­e of the phone, which uses less power when running at slower speeds, and was to prevent unexpected shutdowns due to a low battery charge.

Critics accused it of nudging iPhone users to upgrade to newer models by letting them think it was the handsets that needed replacing, rather than just the battery.

 ??  ?? Apple admitted that it intentiona­lly slows performanc­e of older iPhones as their batteries weaken from age.— AFP
Apple admitted that it intentiona­lly slows performanc­e of older iPhones as their batteries weaken from age.— AFP

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