on 15-06-2015 12:44
on 15-06-2015 12:44
Appalling customer service. My iphone won't turn on. Apple have diagnosed 'hardware fault' - say it's out of warranty so the only solution is to buy a new phone. Phone was new last Feb. Not impressed at all
on 15-06-2015 15:33
on 15-06-2015 16:01
First 12 months is with Apple and the second 12 months of a contract is through the network. Apple devices over 24 months old are covered by the Sales Of Goods Act.....they just make it very difficult
on 15-06-2015 16:14
on 15-06-2015 16:14
on 15-06-2015 16:16
on 15-06-2015 16:16
on 15-06-2015 23:28
on 16-06-2015 06:01
on 16-06-2015 06:01
It depends how far the op is willing to push the legalities with o2...
23-06-2015 16:14 - edited 23-06-2015 16:32
The Sale of Goods and Services Act basically states that goods and services must be:
* As advertised
* Fit for purpose
* Of reasonable quality
The last one is subjective, but an iPhone is an expensive and premium product and it is reasonable to expect it to last well beyond three years. When O2 sell a 24 month service with it, locked in, then they are effectively saying it should reasonably last 24 months. If O2 has sold you some cheapo phone that retails for £80 then you'd struggle with that one. But it's a £400-700 iPhone!
If you have the phone on Refresh then you are also covered by the Consumer Credit act which states that the vendor/service provider and the credit company have joint responsibility. Stop the payments and return the phone.
For more information go to Citizen's advice and possibly the Consumer's Association.
Apple tried the old "it only comes with 12 month warranty" with me once, which is fine, but I also bought the device in question from them - a MacBook Pro. They backed down when I read them the Act.
What you have to be sure of, though, is that the fault was not due to wear and tear (although "fit for purpose" and "reasonable quality" can cover that).
on 23-06-2015 16:29
on 23-06-2015 16:29
Taken to a court of law and I'm sure the verdict will be in your favour. ..It's down to the individual how far they are prepared to go and the big problem is that people aren't willing to go that far. ...
23-06-2015 16:31 - edited 23-06-2015 16:31
That's what Citizen's Advice and Trading Standards are there for. Small Claims (fast track) is the way to go. O2 need to comply with civil law in the UK.
on 23-06-2015 16:38
on 23-06-2015 16:38
O2 as the vendor are the people that need to be accountable, not Apple, but they have no confidence in their own product to give more than 1 year warranty. Anyone else find this totally unacceptable for a £600+ phone?