Apple admits it deliberately slows down iPhones as they get older

The revelation would appear to lend weight to a popular conspiracy, though the tech giant says it throttles performance on the mobile phones as a precautionary measure

Aatif Sulleyman
Thursday 21 December 2017 12:22 GMT
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A shopper tries out the new Apple iPhone 6 at the Apple Store on the first day of sales of the new phone in Germany on September 19, 2014 in Berlin, Germany
A shopper tries out the new Apple iPhone 6 at the Apple Store on the first day of sales of the new phone in Germany on September 19, 2014 in Berlin, Germany

Apple has admitted to intentionally slowing down iPhones as they get older, without notifying customers.

The revelation would appear to lend weight to a popular conspiracy theory about the mobile phone.

However, the tech giant claims the move is not designed to encourage customers to upgrade to newer iPhone models.

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Rather, Apple says it throttles iPhone performance as a precautionary measure. If it did not, the company claims, older iPhones would keep shutting down unexpectedly or break earlier than they should.

“Last year we released a feature for iPhone 6, iPhone 6s and iPhone SE to smooth out the instantaneous peaks only when needed to prevent the device from unexpectedly shutting down during these conditions,” Apple told Reuters.

“We’ve now extended that feature to iPhone 7 with iOS 11.2, and plan to add support for other products in the future.”

The issue comes from the iPhone’s battery, rather than its processor.

iPhones use lithium-ion batteries, which degrade over time, and Apple says that if it did not throttle performance there would be a greater risk of internal components being damaged.

Customers have long suspected Apple slows iPhones down as they age, but this is the first time the company has admitted to doing so.

It addressed the issue after Primate labs founder John Poole analysed iPhone 6S and iPhone 7 performance over time.

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“Users expect either full performance, or reduced performance with a notification that their phone is in low-power mode,” he wrote in a blog post earlier this week.

“This fix creates a third, unexpected state. While this state is created to mask a deficiency in battery power, users may believe that the slow down is due to CPU performance, instead of battery performance, which is triggering an Apple introduced CPU slow-down.

“This fix will also cause users to think, ‘my phone is slow so I should replace it’ not, ‘my phone is slow so I should replace its battery’. This will likely feed into the ‘planned obsolecense’ narritive [sic].”

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