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by pacamara619 2059 days ago
> There is zero doubt in my mind that this is completely deliberate

It is, and there is proof. A two cameras have been swapped and didn't work, they worked again when swapped back so there was no damage while disasembling it.

Louis Rossmann has pointed this out in one of his recent YouTube videos, just like he points out so many other scams Apple is getting away with.

1 comments

This doesn't sound like a scam, it sounds like the peripheral is calibrated and mapped to the device in software. It doesn't surprise me that it would fail, kind of like that video where someone swapped the board out and expected everything to work when to the device it appears every single peripheral has had a failure condition and needs to be recalibrated and verified.

I don't have an issue with requiring software tools to repair software problems in modern electronics. The issue at hand is whether that tool is available for consumers and repair shops, which I doubt.

It's absolutely NOT about "calibration" or whatever other excuses, because (every other manufacturer's) phone cameras use a more or less standard interface based on MIPI CSI, and are basically designed to be plug-and-play to allow ease of integration and development. The only things that could be considered calibration in camera modules are presets that are stored in an EEPROM, and affect the quality of the image at most. It would not cause any of the symptoms outlined in the article.

In other words, Apple went out of their way to do this. They probably use the EEPROM to store some additional serialisation data, check whether it matches the data stored on the mainboard, and then subtly sabotage the behaviour of the app based on that. It won't be long before the truth surfaces.

They've already done similar shady shit with even simpler parts like batteries: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=20641424

May be people are putting in Non Apple Cameras in those phones for repair or returns. Or start selling those as parts from these exchange and stolen parts online . And while it is a relatively small in percentage, at Apple scale it is still massive amount of money.

I am not sure if there is a solution that solves "both" side of the equation.