Categories: HardwareSoftware

Samsung Officially Halts All Note7 Sales & Exchanges: Asks Customers To Stop Using Them

Samsung made it official today that it is suspending all sales and exchanges of its beleaguered Galaxy Note7 smartphone, and it is also asking all partners to do the same.

After reports of several phones catching on fire after it initially went on sale, Samsung initiated a global recall while it investigated the source of the problem, which traced the issue to defective batteries from a specific supplier (Samsung sources batteries from more than one supplier). With the problem seemingly solved, Samsung initiated an exchange program where customers could trade in their defective Note7s for new, supposedly safe, ones or a new Galaxy S7 or S7 edge instead.

Unfortunately, it did not take long for fresh reports of battery fires to surface. Several of the replacement Note7s have caught fire too, including one that forced a Southwest Airlines flight in Louisville, Kentucky to be evacuated on October 5th. Another replacement Note7 caught fire in Farmington, Minnesota girl’s hand on October 7th.

Here’s Samsung’s official statement:

We are working with the US Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC) to investigate the recently reported cases involving the Galaxy Note7. Because consumers’ safety remains our top priority, Samsung will ask all carrier and retail partners globally to stop sales and exchanges of the Galaxy Note7 while the investigation is taking place.

We remain committed to working diligently with the CPSC, carriers and our retail partners to take all necessary steps to resolve the situation. Consumers with an original Galaxy Note7 or replacement Galaxy Note7 should power down and take advantage of the remedies available, including a refund at their place of purchase. For more information, consumers should visit samsung.com/us/note7recall or contact 1-844-365-6197.

These new incidents suggest that the Note7’s issue is not limited to a single battery supplier like Samsung first thought. The Note7 is clearly a safety risk at this point, and we recommend that anyone that currently owns a Note7 heed Samsung’s advice and immediately power down the device and store it in a fire-safe location until it can be returned or exchanged.

Autore: AnandTech

admin

Recent Posts

Così Renault punta ad abbassare il prezzo delle sue auto elettriche

Author: Tom's Hardware Le batterie a litio-ferro-fosfato (LFP) rappresentano una soluzione efficace per automobili di…

4 Luglio 2024

Xbox: dipendente licenziata mentre era in vacanza, nuovo round di tagli in arrivo?

Author: GAMEmag Prosegue la serie di licenziamenti che hanno contraddistinto il 2024 come l'anno peggiore…

4 Luglio 2024

Moshi, l’intelligenza artificiale adesso esprime emozioni: come provarla

Author: IlSoftware Kyutai è il primo laboratorio di ricerca indipendente sull’intelligenza artificiale in Europa, inaugurato…

4 Luglio 2024

Cohesity + Veritas: la sicurezza informatica potenziata dall’IA

Author: Hardware Upgrade Il pericolo principale del mondo informatico? Secondo Cohesity è il ransomware, che…

4 Luglio 2024

Vor Formel-1-Rennen: Brad Pitt dreht in Silverstone für Rennfahrerfilm

Author: klatsch-tratsch Brad Pitt war am Donnerstag der Star von Silverstone. (jom/spot)Imago Images/PanoramiC / Imago…

4 Luglio 2024

Prova de águas abertas atraiu várias caras conhecidas na Baía de Cascais – Stars Online

Author: Stars Online A Travessia Global Ocean Cascais 2024 decorreu na Baía de Cascais, atraindo…

4 Luglio 2024