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If you buy a Corolla, pay it off, then a few years later buy a Camry too, and you default on its loan, should they be allowed to remotely disable both of your cars?


They didn't disable his phone, they disabled the services that ran on their servers. Should you still get updates and navigation in both of your cars if you effectively steal the car? I can't think of a case where that would be reasonable.

Moreover, cars are much more easily repossessed than phones and laptops.


> They didn't disable his phone, they disabled the services that ran on their servers. Should you still get updates and navigation in both of your cars if you effectively steal the car? I can't think of a case where that would be reasonable.

Society has decided that defaulting on a car loan is not equivalent to stealing a car. This is why you can still go to jail for the latter even though debtor's prisons were abolished.

> Moreover, cars are much more easily repossessed than phones and laptops.

Sure, let's go that route instead. Should they be able to repossess your paid-off Corolla because you defaulted on payments for your Camry?


You're not even trying to make a good faith argument.

1. They didn't stop him from using his devices. They stopped his calendar from syncing.

2. They didn't reposess his devices. In fact, all of the inconvenience the author faces is in services he expects Apple to provide after he doesn't pay them for their hardware and ignores their emails.

3. Should your Corolla's cloud based gps routing stop working when you break your contract with Toyota over your Camry? Arguably yes. The car didn't default on the loan, you did. You broke your contract, why would you expect the other party to continue allowing you to be their customer?

Because that's really what this is. The device is unaffected. Apple cut them off as a customer. Suggesting they did anything more than that is disingenuous.


> services he expects Apple to provide after he doesn't pay them for their hardware

The problem is that Apple didn't just disable these services on the device he didn't pay for. They disabled them even on the devices he did pay for.

> Should your Corolla's cloud based gps routing stop working when you break your contract with Toyota over your Camry? Arguably yes. The car didn't default on the loan, you did. You broke your contract, why would you expect the other party to continue allowing you to be their customer?

Because the contract says what happens if you default, and that isn't one of the things it says.


Apple is under no obligation at any time to maintain your subscription because they too have the right to terminate the contract for iCloud and your Apple ID. If you get to the end of the billing cycle and they don't want you as a customer, they have no legal requirement to continue billing you and providing you service. Imagine how outrageous it would be to live in a society where sellers were prohibited from terminating contracts with customers who didn't pay them.

Moreover, you sign a contract when you agree to the terms of the purchase, as well as the trade in. None of this is a surprise.

Across the board, the author didn't read.


This is all good, but you’re still ignoring the fact that they don’t owe Apple anything. The credit card is run by Goldman Sachs, not Apple.




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