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Wanna Start a Fire?

Posted: 2009-08-05 08:09am
by Lonestar
There's an app for that.
August 3, 2009

Apple tried to silence owner of exploding iPod with gagging order

Murad Ahmed, Technology Reporter
108 Comments
Recommend? (151)
Apple attempted to silence a father and daughter with a gagging order after the child’s iPod music player exploded and the family sought a refund from the company.

The Times has learnt that the company would offer the family a full refund only if they were willing to sign a settlement form. The proposed agreement left them open to legal action if they ever disclosed the terms of the settlement.

The case echoes previous circumstances in which Apple attempted to hush up incidents when its devices overheated.

Ken Stanborough, 47, from Liverpool, dropped his 11-year-old daughter Ellie’s iPod Touch last month. “It made a hissing noise,” he said. “I could feel it getting hotter in my hand, and I thought I could see vapour”. Mr Stanborough said he threw the device out of his back door, where “within 30 seconds there was a pop, a big puff of smoke and it went 10ft in the air”.

Mr Stanborough contacted Apple and Argos, where he had bought the device for £162. After being passed around several departments, he spoke to an Apple executive on the telephone. As a result of the conversation, Apple sent a letter to Mr Stanborough denying liability but offering a refund.

The letter also stated that, in accepting the money, Mr Stanborough was to “agree that you will keep the terms and existence of this settlement agreement completely confidential”, and that any breach of confidentiality “may result in Apple seeking injunctive relief, damages and legal costs against the defaulting persons or parties”.

“I thought it was a very disturbing letter,” said Mr Stanborough, who is self-employed and works in electronic security. He refused to sign it.

“They’re putting a life sentence on myself, my daughter and Ellie’s mum, not to say anything to anyone. If we inadvertently did say anything, no matter what, they would take litigation against us. I thought that was absolutely appalling.

“We didn’t ask for compensation, we just asked for our money back,” he added.

Last week it emerged that Apple had tried to keep a number of cases where its iPod digital music players had started to smoke, burst into flames and even burned their owners, out of the public eye.

An American reporter obtained 800 pages of documentation on the cases from the Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC) following a Freedom of Information Act request in that country. However, she was unable to get hold of the documents for months after “Apple’s lawyers filed exemption after exemption”.

In those cases, CPSC investigators suggested that the iPods’ lithium ion batteries could be the source of the problem.

In 2006 Apple and Dell recalled millions of lithium ion batteries because of overheating problems in laptop computers causing fires — some of the biggest consumer electronics recalls in history. As of September last year, 173,000,000 iPods have been sold worldwide.

A number of bloggers have reported cases where iPods have exploded — usually involving older versions of the digital music players. Last year the Japanese Government warned that iPod Nanos presented a potential fire risk, saying there had been 14 cases in the country where the players had caught alight, with two people suffering minor burns.

In March, a mother in Ohio began court proceedings against Apple, after her son’s iPod Touch allegedly exploded in his pocket, burning his leg.

An Apple spokesman said that, as the company had not looked at the Stanboroughs’ damaged iPod, it could not comment. Argos also refused to comment.

The Trading Standards Institute said that it could not comment on whether such letters were standard across the industry, but that it could understand that Apple would want to protect its reputation by trying to reach a confidential settlement.
How long before Microsoft starts a MP3HUNTERS add with "I'm looking for something that doesn't explode"?

(yeah yeah, I saw it on Tom's Hardware)

Re: Wanna Start a Fire?

Posted: 2009-08-05 09:50am
by Oskuro
Reading this while my iPod is playing: not good. :roll:

Re: Wanna Start a Fire?

Posted: 2009-08-05 11:47am
by General Zod
I've heard all kinds of kooky things about incidents like these, including Apple blaming it on being left in the sun too long. Related lulzy link. The probability of iPhones to melt and/or explode is just one more reason for me not to get one, on top of my main reason being that AT&T sucks ass. :)

Image

Re: Wanna Start a Fire?

Posted: 2009-08-05 11:56am
by phongn
Sounds like more issues with Li-Ion chemistry.

Re: Wanna Start a Fire?

Posted: 2009-08-05 12:04pm
by Sarevok
I have seen Nokia phones explode while in use.

The iPhone is a piece of shit for many reasons but blaming unsafe design is stretching it too far.

Re: Wanna Start a Fire?

Posted: 2009-08-05 12:06pm
by General Zod
Sarevok wrote:I have seen Nokia phones explode while in use.

The iPhone is a piece of shit for many reasons but blaming unsafe design is stretching it too far.
Why? If numerous people are reporting their iPhones melting for no apparent reason except the terrible battery design then I don't see how safety isn't a perfectly valid reason. The iPhone is a nice device otherwise, but the melting battery problems combined with questionable carriers make it not worthwhile.

Re: Wanna Start a Fire?

Posted: 2009-08-05 06:03pm
by phongn
General Zod wrote:Why? If numerous people are reporting their iPhones melting for no apparent reason except the terrible battery design then I don't see how safety isn't a perfectly valid reason. The iPhone is a nice device otherwise, but the melting battery problems combined with questionable carriers make it not worthwhile.
Every Li-Ion battery is susceptible to thermal runaway.

Re: Wanna Start a Fire?

Posted: 2009-08-11 04:11am
by Spyder
Given the number of iPhones in use I'm sure they're well within their explosion quota.

Re: Wanna Start a Fire?

Posted: 2009-08-11 04:13am
by Stark
General Zod wrote:Why? If numerous people are reporting their iPhones melting for no apparent reason except the terrible battery design then I don't see how safety isn't a perfectly valid reason. The iPhone is a nice device otherwise, but the melting battery problems combined with questionable carriers make it not worthwhile.
What's of more concern than the exception is what damage overheating-but-not-exploding batteries do to appliances. I've had my iPhone replaced, and the new one never gets as hot as the old one did when charging and performs better.

Re: Wanna Start a Fire?

Posted: 2009-08-11 09:59pm
by Stofsk
Spyder wrote:Given the number of iPhones in use I'm sure they're well within their explosion quota.
You made me lol :)

Re: Wanna Start a Fire?

Posted: 2009-08-12 05:08am
by Stark
It may shock people to know that some proportion of every product is doomed to fail. It's like ... insurance. :)

Re: Wanna Start a Fire?

Posted: 2009-08-12 03:06pm
by GrandMasterTerwynn
phongn wrote:
General Zod wrote:Why? If numerous people are reporting their iPhones melting for no apparent reason except the terrible battery design then I don't see how safety isn't a perfectly valid reason. The iPhone is a nice device otherwise, but the melting battery problems combined with questionable carriers make it not worthwhile.
Every Li-Ion battery is susceptible to thermal runaway.
Indeed. Though, usually, you have to abuse a Li-Ion/Li-poly battery before it puffs up and goes grenade on you. Though, as the common ways to abuse a Li-ion cell to the point where it blows include regularly charging it above 4.2 VDC per cell, charging at too high a current, discharging it below 3.0 VDC per cell, and discharging it at too high a current (shorts count) . . . suggests that a flaw exists in the way the charging circuitry is designed, or the cells included in the batteries are poorly matched to their intended application.

Re: Wanna Start a Fire?

Posted: 2009-08-12 04:46pm
by Spyder
Stark wrote:It may shock people to know that some proportion of every product is doomed to fail. It's like ... insurance. :)
Such is the price we pay for cheap electronics.

Re: Wanna Start a Fire?

Posted: 2009-08-14 07:35am
by Lonestar
Moving on to exploding iPhones.

Yeesh.