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[INFO] Root e flash não invalida a garantia


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#1 Duarte777

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Mensagem publicada 18 November 2012 - 00:16

Muitos dos android users perguntam-se se fazer root e flashar uma costum rom no seu equipamento vai anular a garantia.


A FSFE (Free Software Foundation Europe), concluiu que o root e o flashar os nossos equipamentos não invalida a garantia.
Os fabricantes não podem recusar a recuperação de um dispositivo porque modificar ou alterar o software do sistema não é uma razão suficiente para anular a "garantia legal".
O vendedor tem de provar que o defeito é causado por ações do usuário antes de perder completamente a garantia. A menos que, o padrão de 2 anos de garantia ainda é válida. Assim, a Directiva 1999/44/CE dictates1 protege os consumidores mesmo que tenham root e usem costum Roms.



Artigo completo (ingles):


Directive 1999/44/CE dictates1 that any object meeting certain criteria (incl. telephones, computers, routers etc.) that is sold to a consumer2. inside the European Union, has to carry a warranty from the seller that the device will meet the quality that you would expect for such a device for a period of 2 years.
A telephone is an example of such a device and is an object that comprises many parts, from the case to the screen to the radio, to a mini-computer, to the battery, to the software that runs it. If any of these parts3 stop working in those 2 years, the seller has to fix or replace them. What is more these repairs should not cost the consumer a single cent — the seller has to cover the expenses (Directive 1999/44/CE, §3). If the seller has any expenses for returning it to the manufacturer, this is not your problem as a consumer.

If your device becomes defective in the first 6 months, it is presumed that the defect was there all along, so you should not need to prove anything.

If your device becomes defective after the first 6 months, but before 2 years run out, you are still covered. The difference is only that if the defect arises now, the seller can claim that the defect was caused by some action that was triggered by non-normal use of the device4. But in order to avoid needing to repair or replace your device, the seller has to prove that your action caused5 the defect. It is generally recognised by courts that unless there is a sign of abuse of the device, the defect is there because the device was faulty from the beginning. That is just common sense, after all.

So, we finally come to the question of rooting, flashing and changing the software. Unless the seller can prove that modifying the software, rooting your device or flashing it with some other OS or firmware was the cause for the defect, you are still covered for defects during those 2 years. A good test to see if it is the software’s fault is to flash it back with stock firmware/OS and see if the problem persists. If it does, it is not a software-caused problem. If it is not possible to revert it stock software any more, it is also not a software-caused defect. There are very few hardware defects that are caused by software — e.g. overriding the speaker volume above the safe level could blow the speaker.

Many manufacturers of consumer devices write into their warranties a paragraph that by changing the software or “rooting” your device, you void the warranty. You have to understand that in EU we have a “statutory warranty”, which is compulsory that the seller must offer by law (Directive 1999/44/CE, §7.1) and a “voluntary warranty” which the seller or manufacturer can, but does not need to, offer as an additional service to the consumer. Usually the “voluntary warranty” covers a longer period of time or additional accidents not covered by law6. If though the seller, the manufacturer or anyone else offers a “voluntary warranty”, he is bound to it as well!

So, even if, by any chance your “voluntary warranty” got voided, by European law, you should still have the 2 year “compulsory warranty” as it is described in the Directive and which is the topic of this article.

In case the seller refuses your right to repair or replace the device, you can sue him in a civil litigation and can report the incident to the national authority. In many European countries such action does not even require hiring a lawyer and is most of the time ensured by consumers associations.

The warranty under this Directive is only applicable inside the European Union and only if you bought the device as a consumer.

[1] EU member states must have by now imported the Directive 1999/44/CE into their national laws. So you should quote also your local law on that topic.

[2] A consumer is a natural person who acts for their own private purposes and not as a professional. .

[3] Batteries can be exempt of this and usually hold only 6 months warranty.

[4] E.g. a defect power button could be caused by spreading marmalade in it or hooking it onto a robot that would continuously press the button every second 24/7 — of course that is not normal or intended use.

[5] Note that correlation is not causation — the defect has to be proven to be caused by your action, not just correlate with it.



[6] E.g. if a device manufacturer guarantees the phone is water- and shock-proof or a car manufacturer offers 7 years of warranty against rust.


Fonte: http://forum.xda-dev...82#post34284482

Editado por Duarte777, 18 November 2012 - 00:18.

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#2 DjPalix

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Mensagem publicada 18 November 2012 - 00:54

Excelente notícia

Sent from my GT-I9300



#3 Mombus

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Mensagem publicada 28 November 2012 - 01:36

E quem tem root ? Pode voltar a colocar tudo de origem ?

#4 caniba

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Mensagem publicada 22 March 2014 - 21:46

Segundo o manual completo do meu telemovel disponivel no site da LG  tinha la isto escrito.

 

 ATENÇÃO
Se pretender instalar e utilizar 
um SO diferente do fornecido 
pelo fabricante, poderá provocar 
anomalias no seu telefone. Além 
disso, o seu telefone deixa de estar 
abrangido pela garantia.