However, EU regulation introduced in June 2025 requires that all smartphones sold on the European market receive software updates for a long time. The directive does not specify a minimum price for this rule to take effect. The EU explicitly states that software updates must be available for five years after a device is no longer sold.

Motorola’s lawyers have apparently studied that legal text closely, and now the company appears to be ready to confront the EU Commission. Their interpretation is that the EU does not actually require updates to be provided at all, but only requires that if updates are offered, they must be free of charge. However, we are not aware of any case in which a smartphone manufacturer has ever charged money for security patches.

  • Onomatopoeia@lemmy.cafe
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    19 hours ago

    iOS is meaningless. We have zero insight into what’s really going on, and it’s not a device that allows any control.

    Apple lies and obfuscates as much as any other org does, and is majorly hypocritical about it.

    Plus, it’s a lot easier to provide updates when you control all the hardware, and sunset perfectly good hardware by not allowing apps to continue to work.