The convenient new cables are the future -- if we don't have to worry
that shoddily built ones will zap our laptops when it's time to charge
our phone.
Amazon apparently doesn't want to stand in the way of a major improvement coming to computer cables.
USB
cables for charging your phone and connecting your printer to your PC
are getting easier to use and more powerful with the new USB Type-C
variety. But defective cables that can damage your computer's USB ports
are ten-a-penny, and Amazon is cracking down on businesses selling them
on its site.
The online retailing giant on Wednesday tightened regulations for selling USB Type-C cables.
It added faulty USB-C cables to a list of banned items that also
includes pirated DVDs and portable lasers. Those selling them risk Amazon shutting down their account and destroying any of their products stocked in Amazon fulfillment centers.
It's vindication for Google engineer Benson Leung, a Type-C fan who's painstakingly tested
dozens of Type-C cables bought through Amazon and posted the results to
try to help buyers steer clear of faulty models. During that testing, a
shoddy USB-C cable zapped his own Pixel laptop.
USB-C connections have begun replacing today's array of USB cables
as the way to provide data and power connections. They're reversible,
so you don't need to figure out which end is which, and they can carry a
lot more power, meaning that they'll be useful charging not just phones
and tablets but also laptops,
external hard drives, monitors and just about any other gadget. But the
promise of USB-C will never be achieved if everyone has to fret that
some noncompliant cable could fry or shut down their computer.
Reacting to the news
on Google+, Leung said: "Really great news, but we all have to continue
to be vigilant and call out any bad products we find on Amazon and
other stores (both online and brick and mortar) as we find them."
Source: Cnet
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