Linked by Thom Holwerda on Fri 20th May 2011 20:37 UTC
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Member since:
2008-07-15
And yet, the way it is now, that trojan will *still* be sitting in the background collecting credit card information. There's a difference between providing product support for something you aren't supposed to, and blatantly leaving an issue unsolved *without* even notifying the customer that there's a possible problem there. You claim to have worked in customer service and, maybe things are different in NZ than they are here in the US (in fact I'm sure they are) but, let me tell you, if someone were to take their product to me and something like this results, I'd get sued anyway. I've worked in cs too (though I don't anymore) and There's only one real way to prevent getting sued in this situation, and that is to put the decision in the hands of the customer. You tell them clearly what the issue is, in easy-to-understand terms, and you let them decide if they want you to fix it or not. Either extreme (ignoring it or fixing it without asking) is a fast track to the court room, and I'm not just talking about technical support and service. Apple are not obligated to provide support for Mac Defender and its offspring, but they *are* obligated to provide support for OS X especially if you've paid for Apple Care. There is, after this trojan has its way, an issue with your OS X installation. They should at least have the decency to grow up and admit the problem. Then again, this is Apple we're talking about.
This is not going to prevent them from getting sued, especially now that it's out there. What this will do is drop the confidence level of Apple's tech support ever so slightly. Give it a few months, and we'll be seeing customers calling Apple and demanding an answer as to why their machine is still acting up after Apple's "geniuses" got through with it.
And as for the rest, tone down the vitriol a little. It doesn't help you make your points.