Smoking may void Applecare warranty

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  • Reply 21 of 331
    solipsismsolipsism Posts: 25,726member
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by ktappe View Post


    Pouring Pepsi into your computer is a perfectly legal activity. But it's just as legal for Apple to say "Nope, we're not fixing that under warranty." Same thing for a coating of tar.



    Apple isn't saying owners can't smoke. If they were, you'd be correct. But since they're not, your argument falls flat. If this goes to court, the owner will lose.



    I see. Your comment first read to me that they shouldn?t smoke at all but it now it sounds like you are saying they shouldn?t smoke around electronics, especially without proper ventilation. That makes sense.
  • Reply 22 of 331
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by nagromme View Post


    It?s one thing to refuse service because excessive tar actually caused the failure (I?ve seen some disgusting stained walls in smokers? homes). Maybe that can happen, hard as it is to believe.




    The tar also helps collect dust, clogging vents and reducing heat transfer effectiveness on heat sinks.



    My only concern with this is where do you draw the line on an "abusive atmosphere" that would void a warranty. Would high humidity, sea air, dramatic temperature swings, etc also fall into the same category? Are you allowed to take your laptop outside? Do you need to seal it somehow if someone is sanding drywall in the office next door?



    What about ants that are attracted to the heat... do they void the warranty?



    It is one thing with the factory warranty, but if you pay for AppleCare, you should have a higher threshold. My MacBookPro has been through hell... but if an unrelated problem voided my (now expired) AppleCare I would be pretty pissed.
  • Reply 23 of 331
    gazoobeegazoobee Posts: 3,754member
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by anantksundaram View Post


    I don't smoke, but I find your attitude quite unbelievable. Last I checked, it is a perfectly legal activity. If smoking did "nothing" for the smoker -- e.g., give them pleasure -- why would they smoke in the first place? And 'hazardous to health?' People lie around in the sun, eat too much red meat, put too much salt in their food, drive above the speed limit, drive after they've had a drink or two, have unprotected/unsafe sex, don't wash hands enough, etc etc. Would you ban all such activity?...



    This is nonsense.



    In the first place just because it isn't illegal now in your country, doesn't mean it won't be soon, or isn't be already in more civilised places. In the second place, your argument about why a smoker smokes is based on the idea of free will when in fact smoking is a simple drug addiction. It has nothing to do with making rational choices or free will.



    Smokers are drug addicts. That's just a simple fact. They have no more control over smoking than a crackhead does over doing crack or a wino has over drinking.



    Third, all your analogies are junk in that laying around in the sun, eating red meat etc., are not only a choice, they are choices that don't affect anyone else.



    Smoke is poison (another fact). Second hand smoke has been proven many times over to be just as bad as firsthand smoke, and third hand smoke is implicated in the latest research as well. No one has the right to poison those around them. They never did. We just weren't sufficiently aware of how dangerous smoking was before.



    Drug addicts don't have the same rights as normal people and there is no "inalienable right" to do drugs. Even if there were, a person's human rights end where another's begin. A person may have the right to shoot a gun, but they don't have the right to shoot it at someone else. Even if a smoker had some kind of "right" to smoke, they don't have the right to do it around anyone else.



    Smoking will be illegal in public in your lifetime probably. Get used to it.
  • Reply 24 of 331
    gazoobeegazoobee Posts: 3,754member
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by GregAlexander View Post


    .. If Apple is denying coverage as it's unhealthy for their workers - then give their workers safety gear or provide a refurb machine.



    they should provide spacesuits for their repair workers just because some smoker can't quit?
  • Reply 25 of 331
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by AppleInsider View Post


    Both customers sent letters directly to Steve Job's office?



    Please retire from writing and do something else instead.
  • Reply 26 of 331
    foo2foo2 Posts: 1,077member
    Why is Apple surprised by computers contaminated with smoke? Clearly Apple just needs to protect its workers from such normal hazards, as per OSHA guidelines. By the way, it's not the nicotine people need to be so concerned about in tobacco smoke, compared to the combustion by-products. Nicotine can be toxic, but there is actually very little evidence for nicotine being a carcinogen. I expect OSHA's guidelines for nicotine have everything to do with toxicity levels and nothing to do with carcinogenicity. And I expect the amount of nicotine spewed even from a heavily smoke-contaminated computer would not be very high--nowhere near toxic levels--particularly in a properly ventilated room.
  • Reply 27 of 331
    technotechno Posts: 737member
    I smell a class action lawsuit in Texas!
  • Reply 28 of 331
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by Foo2 View Post


    Why is Apple surprised by computers contaminated with smoke? Clearly Apple just needs to protect its workers from such normal hazards, as per OSHA guidelines. By the way, it's not the nicotine people need to be so concerned about in tobacco smoke, compared to the combustion by-products. Nicotine can be toxic, but there is actually very little evidence for nicotine being a carcinogen. I expect OSHA's guidelines for nicotine have everything to do with toxicity levels and nothing to do with carcinogenicity. And I expect the amount of nicotine spewed even from a heavily smoke-contaminated computer would not be very high--nowhere near toxic levels--particularly in a properly ventilated room.



    It's still something that should be avoided.



    ------------------------------



    "Nicotine itself is not carcinogenic, according to the International Agency for Research on Cancer, but is implicated in heart disease."

    (quoted from http://jnci.oxfordjournals.org/cgi/c.../full/91/6/502 )



    "Nicotine is not in itself carcinogenic, but has been shown to be co-carcinogenic

    with benzo(a)pyrene [also found in tobacco smoke] in causing skin cancer in mice"

    (quoted from http://arjournals.annualreviews.org/....020186.000321 )



    In conclusion, while nicotine itself is not carcinogenic it is shown to be co-carcinogenic with other chemicals, including those found in cigarette smoke. Once a person has lung cancer, nicotine can interfere with body's natural ability (as well as the ability of cancer fighting drugs) to get rid of the cancer.

    (See http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/7848904 )



    http://toxsci.oxfordjournals.org/cgi...nt/full/79/1/1



    http://www.smoke-free.ca/SL/TSNAfactsheet.PDF



    http://www.treatobacco.net/en/page_62.html
  • Reply 29 of 331
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by Gazoobee View Post


    This is nonsense.



    As you will see below, you are the one spouting nonsense.



    Quote:
    Originally Posted by Gazoobee View Post


    In the first place just because it isn't illegal now in your country, doesn't mean it won't be soon, or isn't be already in more civilised places.



    Name one country where it's illegal -- it's certainly not illegal in the US, where I live. The fact that something could be, some day, illegal is not a basis to act and think like it is. A lot of the other examples I mentioned could be 'illegal' some day, but that doesn't make them illegal now. Nor should it.



    Quote:
    Originally Posted by Gazoobee View Post


    In the second place, your argument about why a smoker smokes is based on the idea of free will when in fact smoking is a simple drug addiction. It has nothing to do with making rational choices or free will.



    You are out of your intellectual league here. Addiction can be, and is often rational. Theories of 'rational addiction' are well-understood. (See for instance, a Nobel laureate economist, Gary Becker, on this issue: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rational_addiction). Incidentally, if it was so irreversibly addictive, people would not be giving it up in droves.



    Quote:
    Originally Posted by Gazoobee View Post


    Third, all your analogies are junk in that laying around in the sun, eating red meat etc., are not only a choice, they are choices that don't affect anyone else.



    Nah, I pay for your skin cancer, your obesity, your health consequences from unsafe sex, etc. -- more generally, a lot of your lifestyle choices -- through my taxes and through the social compact.



    Quote:
    Originally Posted by Gazoobee View Post


    Smoke is poison (another fact). etc etc



    No one disagrees that smoke is poison -- I certainly didn't, and don't. Stop hyperventilating.



    Quote:
    Originally Posted by Gazoobee View Post


    Smoking will be illegal in public in your lifetime probably. Get used to it.



    The fact that it might be illegal in public does not make it illegal (indeed, people don't use their Apple computers mostly in public places).



    It's no wonder that some people on the Right think that people with views like yours are one step away from celebrating fascism in the name of 'social good.'
  • Reply 30 of 331
    mazda 3smazda 3s Posts: 1,613member
    Just say no! Your computer will thank you!





  • Reply 31 of 331
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by anantksundaram View Post




    That's a silly analogy. If so, Apple should state upfront that either that a person in that situation would not qualify for Applecare, or they should charge extra. They do neither.



    I can see this going to court.



    I think that's what Apple's goal is. Take us t court. If you can tar the hell out of your machine in the lousy, at most, three years that you've owned it...you won't live long enough to fight through a lengthy trial



    It's apparent they smoke in their home, which is gross. Take it outside if you want to smoke. Hopefully these people don't have children living with them.
  • Reply 32 of 331
    foo2foo2 Posts: 1,077member
    [QUOTE=Quadra 610;1524460][re: nicotine] It's still something that should be avoided.



    I completely agree, but let's be rational. Apple's response, although not reported in any great detail, sounds quite uninformed.
  • Reply 33 of 331
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by AppleInsider View Post


    ...accounts of being refused computer repair service due to the presence of damage related to smoking. ...would be an OSHA violation.



    And that's just OSHA my friends. Wait until Obamacare is shoved down our throats what with all it's "shalls" and "wills" obey the government or else the government will fine and/or incarcerate!



    Quote:

    Employees at one Apple store reportedly told a customer that her computer was "beyond economical repair due to tar from cigarette smoke."



    Forget the "Intel Inside" or "Nvidia" graphics card labels cluttering up the aesthetic look of an Apple product, I'd sue Apple for failure to have a warning label in plain view on their computers and laptops stating, "Warning: Smoking is not only hazardous to your health, our repair technician's health but smoking will also void the Apple Care warranty you just plopped 349.00 bucks down for extra care for your 15" Macbook Pro or 169.00 bucks for extra iMac care! Kiss that hard earn money good-bye if you smoke! You have been duly warned."



    Quote:

    Apple would not require an employee to repair anything deemed hazardous to their health."



    And yet for years, it was perfectly fine to sell toxic computers to customer and to have service technicians repair said products even with items such as... Lead, Cadmium, Hexavalent Chromium (can you say Erin Brockovich), Decabromodiphenyl Ether, Arsenic, Mercury, Polyvinyl Chloride, Brominated flame retardants are the chemicals stated here from a letter by Steve Jobs.



    http://www.apple.com/hotnews/agreenerapple/



    Grant it all these chemicals were not just now taken out yesterday, but they were in there at a time I bought my first Mac many moons ago and purchased an extended Apple Care warranty with no Health concerns from Apple. Must be a "liberal" philosophy, I guess, and it just depends on who is putting in the poisons!
  • Reply 34 of 331
    geekdadgeekdad Posts: 1,131member
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by Mazda 3s View Post


    Just say no! Your computer will thank you!









    Now this brings up a few things......

    First if the laptop looked like that on the inside then it maybe should have been denied service.

    BUT then how would one clean that kind of mess? They can't open the chassis...that would definatley void the warranty.

    Smoking is NOT illegal anywhere that I know of. If smoke residue can build up inside of a machine.....especially inside a laptop then one could argue that the machine design was at fault and not the fault of the owner who was doing nothing illegal.

    So was the machine design at fault for not providing enough ventilation?

    Or was the machine owner at fault for excessive smoking around the computer.....

    Very very interesting!!!!
  • Reply 35 of 331
    quinneyquinney Posts: 2,528member
    This implies that there is nothing in any of Apple's products that is on the OSHA list of hazardous substances. I know they have been removing Mercury and they probably don't use solder with lead in it, but there are still a lot of exotic elements in electronic components. It is quite an accomplishment if there is nothing hazardous in Apple electronics to jeopardize technicians working on them.
  • Reply 36 of 331
    gazoobeegazoobee Posts: 3,754member
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by anantksundaram View Post


    .. Name one country where it's illegal -- it's certainly not illegal in the US, where I live. T...



    Well this is your mistake, you are assuming that everywhere is like the USA. In Canada it's illegal in most public places, all indoor public places, all restaurants, bars, and public buildings and on all sidewalks within 10 metres of the building. You can smoke in your car, your house, and on a residential sidewalk but that's about it. New laws will be coming into effect banning even more places next year. There are countries with more severe restrictions than us, but I am not going to look them up for you.



    Quote:
    Originally Posted by anantksundaram View Post


    ... You are out of your intellectual league here. Addiction can be, and is often rational. Theories of 'rational addiction' are well-understood. (See for instance, a Nobel laureate economist, Gary Becker, on this issue: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rational_addiction). Incidentally, if it was so irreversibly addictive, people would not be giving it up in droves.



    No. this is BS "science" nobel laureate or not. BTW, both the main guy behind that "theory" and the "nobel laureate" are economists, not scientists or doctors. Becker's Nobel prize is for economics.

    Quote:
    Originally Posted by anantksundaram View Post


    ... Nah, I pay for your skin cancer, your obesity, your health consequences from unsafe sex, etc. -- more generally, a lot of your lifestyle choices -- through my taxes and through the social compact.



    Come on, that's a reach. I was categorising the activities you mentioned. All the one's you mentioned are voluntary and have no impact on those around them. Smoking is 100% different from that. It's not voluntary, and it has a HUGE impact on those around them. These are simple facts whether you agree or not.

    Quote:
    Originally Posted by anantksundaram View Post


    ... No one disagrees that smoke is poison -- I certainly didn't, and don't. Stop hyperventilating.



    Ad hominem attack.

    Quote:
    Originally Posted by anantksundaram View Post


    ... The fact that it might be illegal in public does not make it illegal (indeed, people don't use their Apple computers mostly in public places).



    The repair centre is a workplace and is subject to basic workplace rules. You can't smoke at work, right?

    Quote:
    Originally Posted by anantksundaram View Post


    ... It's no wonder that some people on the Right think that people with views like yours are one step away from celebrating fascism in the name of 'social good.'



    More nonsense. Anyone who thinks anything about "the left" has anything to do with fascism knows nothing about "the left," and nothing about what constitutes fascism. I've never heard anyone even suggest such a thing.



    I appreciate I am being a bit intense about my views here, but you just don't have an argument. Nothing you say has made any kind of logical sense. Smokers are drug addicts. People don't like to think about it that way and it's rude of me to keep saying it out loud perhaps, but it's a plain and simple fact. Ask your doctor. Or come up with one single argument as to why smoking *isn't* drug addiction.
  • Reply 37 of 331
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by ktappe View Post


    Pouring Pepsi into your computer is a perfectly legal activity.



    But Pepsi alone is not on OSHA's list of dangerous chemicals to void a warranty or warrant concerns of a service technicians health. Whereas smoking is?!...
  • Reply 38 of 331
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by Gazoobee View Post


    This is nonsense.



    In the first place just because it isn't illegal now in your country, doesn't mean it won't be soon, or isn't be already in more civilised places. In the second place, your argument about why a smoker smokes is based on the idea of free will when in fact smoking is a simple drug addiction. It has nothing to do with making rational choices or free will.



    Smokers are drug addicts. That's just a simple fact. They have no more control over smoking than a crackhead does over doing crack or a wino has over drinking.



    Third, all your analogies are junk in that laying around in the sun, eating red meat etc., are not only a choice, they are choices that don't affect anyone else.



    Smoke is poison (another fact). Second hand smoke has been proven many times over to be just as bad as firsthand smoke, and third hand smoke is implicated in the latest research as well. No one has the right to poison those around them. They never did. We just weren't sufficiently aware of how dangerous smoking was before.



    Drug addicts don't have the same rights as normal people and there is no "inalienable right" to do drugs. Even if there were, a person's human rights end where another's begin. A person may have the right to shoot a gun, but they don't have the right to shoot it at someone else. Even if a smoker had some kind of "right" to smoke, they don't have the right to do it around anyone else.



    Smoking will be illegal in public in your lifetime probably. Get used to it.



    You are a raving lunatic.

    I agree that nicotine is a drug... I don't agree that all drug users are addicts - by that token everyone who has ever had an alcoholic beverage is a drug addict, which I think is quite an overstatement.

    And smoking also has no effect on anyone else - so anantksundaram's analogies are quite appropriate. I would only ever smoke alone or with other smokers - the same is true for most people I know.





    As for the incident at hand I agree with GregAlexander - if the smoke has caused damage to the machine, that's fine - the user has voided the warranty by causing damage to the machine. If however, Apple are refusing service because of health concerns, they should provide a replacement or a refund - the reasons for the refusal are quite irrelevant - the customer has paid for a service which they have a right to be provided with.
  • Reply 39 of 331
    You know, I think this is a good move for Apple. Anyone with much experience working on consumer electronics should think this is a good thing for Apple. I've repaired computers and other consumer electronics for about 13 years, and it is really appalling to see what shape the interiors of these things are like. I lived in a dairy county in central texas for awhile, and computers clogged with dairy dust are like magnets for cockroaches. We charged $120 just for containment, extermination and cleaning on these machines. Also, tar from cigarettes, dust and human hair are more than just allergens and irritants to human systems; when they build up in sufficient quantities or in just the right places, they actually can form a path for electrons to migrate across, creating shorts in the hardware. So you've got to discharge all the capacitors and soak the darned piece in pure denatured alcohol (depending on what it is, of course) for long enough to dissolve the tar, and then attempt to put it back together after it is brushed and dried and hope for the best. It's labor intensive, most shops aren't willing to even attempt such an operation (for good reason), and replacement under warranty should not be covered by misuse or abuse. And that's what neglecting your electronics is. Clean your stuff! Put a pair of pantyhose over your vacuum hose and clean that nonsense out every once in awhile. 2 users reporting denial does not constitute corporate greed, it seems to indicate a couple of severe, isolated cases, not a widespread conspiracy.

    And for the record, addicted smokers are drug addicts. So are people addicted to caffeine, and every other 'legal' substance added to foods and sundry items. It is what it is, and rose-colored glasses don't change anything. Deal with it.



    Peace Out.
  • Reply 40 of 331
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by Gazoobee View Post


    Well this is your mistake, you are assuming that everywhere is like the USA. In Canada i.... You can smoke in your car, your house, and on a residential sidewalk but that's about it. Blah blah



    You fail test 101 of semi-consciousness: understanding your own prose. Thanks for agreeing that smoking is legal in Canada too.



    Yikes. The rest of your post is an unadulterated rant, and not worthy of the time it will take to respond. In any event, by your own reckoning of how 'intense' you get on this topic, it will not appeal to your cognitive sense, so why bother. (If I might, you sound like someone who has had a terrible family experience with a smoker who suffered. If that's the case, my sympathies).
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