Fake HDMI cable crackdown - Taiwanese police raid suppliers of counterfeit HDMI cables, seize $2.6 million in knockoffs in a single day::Police in Taiwan have cracked down on counterfeit HDMI cable sales, raiding online sellers across the island.
“infringement market value” of approximately USD$2.6 million
hear that, they got an entire box of cables of the market
pedz@lemmy.ca 11 months ago
So the cables are working and are not really “fake”, but more like counterfeit. It’s just that they didn’t pay for the stupid license, just like USB-C, and thus those cables are IlLeGaL.
Poor quality cables can be official too, as paying for the license may take money away from quality. The concerns can be understandable but it sounds more like FUD to make sure people keep buying the “official” and "legal’ cables.
All in all it’s just a question of laws and money for a stupid connector.
JCreazy@midwest.social 11 months ago
Sorry to be a isn’t but USB-C is an open standard and doesn’t require a license.
pedz@lemmy.ca 11 months ago
Oh, thanks for correcting. I thought it was why some manufacturers stuck with micro-usb.
QuaternionsRock@lemmy.world 11 months ago
It is. HDMI is proprietary technology.
DisplayPort ftw
asdfasdfasdf@lemmy.world 11 months ago
How did you get that from this quote? It says they don’t follow standards and could even cause fires. That’s not simply “they didn’t pay for a license”.
BorgDrone@lemmy.one 11 months ago
Causing fires seems very unlikely. An HDMI port outputa 5V at 500mA at most.
pedz@lemmy.ca 11 months ago
This sounds like FUD.
The line about the “warning” sounds exactly like like my old boss when he was selling LCD panels and telling people they had to clean their monitor with the special liquid he was selling at 200% markup because otherwise it would ruin their warranty. Or like some big box employee trying to sell you gold plated HDMI cables so the image can be better quality. Gotta buy the certified one because the cheapo could cause issues!
It’s an HDMI cable FFS! It probably has been made in the exact same plant than other HDMI cables, but without paying for the license.
Blackmist@feddit.uk 11 months ago
Not following standards is a given, considering all the Madeuptech branded cheap 8K cables immediately replaced the 4K cables on Amazon, and were the same price. There was no way they’d retooled all their shit or tested each cable, they just knew that hardly anybody was going to be pushing max bandwidth through one so sold the old ones with new labels on the bag.
And sure, they’ll probably work for the most part. You’ll just get more dropouts than one that was designed for it.
BorgDrone@lemmy.one 11 months ago
They don’t really need to as there is no such thing a a ‘4K or 8K cable’. HDMI cables come in three speeds: standard, high speed and ultra-high speed. You can send 8K video through a high-speed cable just fine, depending on the frame rate. Or you might need an ultra high-speed cable even for 4k if you’re running ar 120Hz.
SkybreakerEngineer@lemmy.world 11 months ago
Selling a component that you know isn’t likely to work? That’s called fraud
pedz@lemmy.ca 11 months ago
There is nothing saying the cables don’t work. The article speculates that they may be faulty but it’s just that, speculation. It’s just that the manufacturer didn’t pay to have the HDMI logo/license. A logo or a license won’t make the cables faulty.
The fraud is not paying the license to the consortium, but the consumers should not really see anything wrong with it. It’s a digital signal. Even if the cable is poor quality, it either works, or not.
I guess maybe the only problem that could arise from this is when trying to watch DRM content on cables that are not properly licensed, there may be some sort of HDCP protection that will not work properly. Maaaaaybe.
So yes, it’s fraud, but not really towards the consumers. The manufacturer was committing fraud by making HDMI cables without paying the license. The cables should be fine but they had to write something about them, like “you know, maybe they will be poor quality or don’t work” to encourage people not to buy them. It’s about money, not the cables.