modestlaw
modestlaw t1_ja88be2 wrote
Reply to comment by Larsaf in Linux Now Officially Supports Apple Silicon by Avieshek
Apple will remove activation lock on a second hand machine with a proof of purchase, but they will explicitly refuse to do it if the computer uses Apple MDM (a feature only used by enterprise) even if you can demonstrate you lawfully received the machines from the company.
Hell, I'm sure these refurbishers would even be willing to pay $20 a machine to get it done. This isn't about protecting users, it's about controlling the volume of second hand MacBooks in the market
modestlaw t1_ja7rirz wrote
Reply to comment by opmwolf in Linux Now Officially Supports Apple Silicon by Avieshek
I don't hate Apple, i actually believe the Apple silicon laptops are the best consumer class laptops on the market.
They are well priced, incredibly built, and have great screens. They are wonderful machines for browsing, office productivity, coding, & video/photo editing. A windows laptop of comparable quality will cost way more and they absolutely stomp everything in their price class.
That being said, I abhor Apple's tendency for being anti repair, anti consumer, greenwashed marketing and building closed ecosystems. If they would support Vulcan, support RCS, and just be more respectful of their users right to own the things they buy, I dare say I would be a fan
modestlaw t1_ja7pydq wrote
Reply to comment by ArtKun in Linux Now Officially Supports Apple Silicon by Avieshek
Yeah I definitely misspoke, that said dropping the adapter when they did was even more anti consumer than I let on because they also switched to including the USB C to Lightening at the same time. Most apple users would need a new adapter to use the included cable completely undermining their environmental excuse for eliminating the adapter in the first place.
modestlaw t1_ja5oul5 wrote
Reply to comment by casualsubversive in Linux Now Officially Supports Apple Silicon by Avieshek
Not for Apple, more M1 Macbooks in landfills means more new M2 MacBooks sold.
But hey, at least Apple is concerned about lightning cable adapters ending up in the landfill & conveniently stopped include one in every new iphone sold /s
Edit- slight correction, it was the wall adapter they stopped including, right when they switched to USB c ends on the cables and most users would want a new adapter
modestlaw t1_ja5mqqq wrote
Reply to comment by semibiquitous in Linux Now Officially Supports Apple Silicon by Avieshek
https://9to5mac.com/2023/01/27/2020-macs-landfill/
The long short is that enterprises cycle through their machines every 2 to 3 year and dump their old machines to refurbishers. The companies however don't go through the effort to wipe them properly resulting in an Activation Lock effectively bricking otherwise functional machines.
The companies aren't interested in unlocking hundreds machines one at a time and Apple provides no avenue for resellers to fix the issue themselves
modestlaw t1_ja3r5r0 wrote
Reply to Linux Now Officially Supports Apple Silicon by Avieshek
Hopefully this will lead to less M1 Macs ending up in landfills.
modestlaw t1_ja8m220 wrote
Reply to comment by Larsaf in Linux Now Officially Supports Apple Silicon by Avieshek
The back door already exist.
Apple can already remove the lock, they just don't do it for enterprise machines
This isn't even an instance where information security is a concern, the drives are already wiped. This is to complete the factory reset and establish a new user.
And to get ahead of your "but what if its a stolen laptop" Apple already confirms the machine hasn't been stolen before unlocking them for non enterprise machines.