
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 arenāt 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 āUSB 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.
Itās great that Amazonās changed the rules, though itās unclear how strictly itāll be enforced, since the company is unlikely to review them on its own.
Leung points out on Google+ that itās āreally great newsā but āwe all have to continue to be vigilant and call out any bad products.ā Itās 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 itās incredibly difficult to tell if a USB-C cable is legitimate.
If youāre comfortable with a command line there are some ways to test cables on Chrome OS machines ā otherwise itās easiest just to follow Leungās reviews on Amazon.
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