This article was published on March 30, 2016

Amazon bans low quality USB-C cables after Google engineer slammed shitty cables


Amazon bans low quality USB-C cables after Google engineer slammed shitty cables

Over the last few months, Google engineer Benson Leung took to Amazon to review hundreds of shoddy USB-C cables that were available for purchase but not up to specification.

Today Amazon quietly made a change to its terms and conditions to prohibit USB-C cables that arenā€™t compliant with the official standard. A new line says:

Any USB-Cā„¢ (or USB Type-Cā„¢) cable or adapter product that is not compliant with standard specifications issued by ā€œUSB Implementers Forum Inc.ā€

Leung started reviewing the cables when he found that many of them that were widely available could cause issues or even make a laptop stop working entirely.

Itā€™s great that Amazonā€™s changed the rules, though itā€™s unclear how strictly itā€™ll be enforced, since the company is unlikely to review them on its own.

Leung points out on Google+ that itā€™s ā€œreally great newsā€ but ā€œwe all have to continue to be vigilant and call out any bad products.ā€ Itā€™s not just Amazon and stores that have had the problem, with even some smartphone makers like Oppo shipping bad cables.

The problem, for most of us, is that itā€™s incredibly difficult to tell if a USB-C cable is legitimate.

If youā€™re comfortable with a command line there are some ways to test cables on Chrome OS machines ā€“ otherwise itā€™s easiest just to follow Leungā€™s reviews on Amazon.

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