- Starting on August 16, Apple is offering trade-ins on third-party chargers for iPhones, iPads
- Users can bring charger into an Apple Store and get an Apple-branded adapter for $10
- Company statement: "Customer safety is a top priority at Apple"
- A faulty iPhone charger may have electrocuted a woman in China last month
The USB Power Adapter
Takeback Program will allow you to bring your third-party adapter in to
an Apple Store or Apple authorized service provider and get an
Apple-branded adapter for $10 ("or the approximate equivalent in local
currency"), just over half of the standard price of $19.
The program is being offered in response to "safety issues" related to "counterfeit and third-party adapters."
"Customer safety is a top priority at Apple," the company said in its announcement.
"That's why all of our products—including USB power adapters for
iPhone, iPad, and iPod—undergo rigorous testing for safety and
reliability and are designed to meet government safety standards around
the world."
Electrocuted by charging iPhone 5?
This program has almost certainly been prompted by reports
from last month, which alleged that an iPhone had electrocuted and
killed a Chinese flight attendant. Later reports pointed to a
third-party charger, not the phone itself, as the actual culprit.
Apple will run the
program until October 18, 2013, and the company will give users one
discounted charger for each iPhone, iPad, and iPod owned. Interested
parties will need to bring their iDevices in along with the power
adapters so that Apple and its resellers can verify the devices' serial
numbers.
The old adapters will be "disposed of in an environmentally friendly way."
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