I bought mine via craigslist. Warranty is still good for another year but it was not transferred to me. How can I convince Google to send me an unlocked bootloader? Phone is in perfect condition with everything working. Came with original box.
And is not it necessary for Verizon to ask for an unlock? I'm also interested in thisSo you are basically asking us how to defraud Google?
A warranty replacement will most likely end up giving you the same device but refurbished as the purpose of warranties is to fix your device/item with the exact one but without the defect.I bought mine via craigslist. Warranty is still good for another year but it was not transferred to me. How can I convince Google to send me an unlocked bootloader? Phone is in perfect condition with everything working. Came with original box.
Should have bought a unlocked version to start with.
You can get an unlocked one for the same price as the Verizon model.I hate this answer bro. No offense. Not everyone can afford $900 upfront. And their finance option isn't that easy to get approval.
You can get an unlocked one for the same price as the Verizon model.
It doesn't make it okay to buy a red car through a private seller and then ask the dealer to give you a blue one because you don't like the blue, although the red one is perfectly fine. He chose the Verizon one, he's stuck with it.
The warranty on the device is valid only for the person who originally bought it. Since you are not the original buyer, the warranty is null and void. Requesting an exchange because of the bootloader being locked would not be honored even if you were the original purchaser of the device; bootloader locking is not a defect.I bought mine via craigslist. Warranty is still good for another year but it was not transferred to me. How can I convince Google to send me an unlocked bootloader? Phone is in perfect condition with everything working. Came with original box.
I bought mine via craigslist. Warranty is still good for another year but it was not transferred to me. How can I convince Google to send me an unlocked bootloader? Phone is in perfect condition with everything working. Came with original box.
The warranty on the device is valid only for the person who originally bought it. Since you are not the original buyer, the warranty is null and void. Requesting an exchange because of the bootloader being locked would not be honored even if you were the original purchaser of the device; bootloader locking is not a defect.
You're not going to be able to convince Google to swap devices. So, you either deal with what you have, or sell it on Swappa and get something else.
What have we learned from this boys and girls? Never to buy smartphones off Craigslist. Because if you get lucky, you just end up not being able to unlock a bootloader. If you get really lucky, the IMEI is blacklisted and the police confiscate the device because it was stolen, leaving you out of pocket the amount you spent, with nothing to show for it.
The OP did not buy the phone from Google, Best Buy, Verizon, or any other authorized reseller and thus the warranty is null and void. The only value the IMEI has is determining the phone's date of manufacture. The warranty however starts on the date of purchase, which could be months later.This Limited Warranty is only valid and enforceable in locations the Phone is sold and will apply only if you purchased your Phone from Google or its authorized resellers.
@smartymcfly: Google makes a copy of the device warranty available on their support pages. The Pixel 2 XL warranty reads, in part...
The OP did not buy the phone from Google, Best Buy, Verizon, or any other authorized reseller and thus the warranty is null and void. The only value the IMEI has is determining the phone's date of manufacture. The warranty however starts on the date of purchase, which could be months later.
In your case you bought direct from Google and gave the device as a gift, even if you did get paid back, which is why the warranty still applied to your phone. The OP bought his secondhand, off Craigslist. The moment money exchanged hands the warranty became null and void. The OP pointed out the warranty did not transfer over in his opening post. He therefore must have contacted Google, who then told him the warranty was invalid.While what you say is true, the truth is not always black and white.
In your case you bought direct from Google and gave the device as a gift, even if you did get paid back, which is why the warranty still applied to your phone. The OP bought his secondhand, off Craigslist. The moment money exchanged hands the warranty became null and void. The OP pointed out the warranty did not transfer over in his opening post. He therefore must have contacted Google, who then told him the warranty was invalid.
Google being liberal with the warranty does not invalidate its existence. We are all bound by its terms and conditions.
That may be, but we simply don't know for sure. All we do know is that the OP's warranty is void. The warranty for the phone itself specifies that the warranty only applies if purchased from Google or one of its authorized resellers, e.g. Best Buy, Verizon, or Amazon. Since Craigslist is not an authorized reseller, the warranty is void, period.
On a side note, if you head to Google's support pages and start the process of a RMA, they require an order number. This is to ensure that the phone was purchased from Google or an authorized reseller. So is Google being nice and not verifying the phone was even purchased before authorizing the RMA, or are people simply omitting the fact the order number is required when mentioning that they received a RMA?
That may be, but we simply don't know for sure. All we do know is that the OP's warranty is void. The warranty for the phone itself specifies that the warranty only applies if purchased from Google or one of its authorized resellers, e.g. Best Buy, Verizon, or Amazon. Since Craigslist is not an authorized reseller, the warranty is void, period.
On a side note, if you head to Google's support pages and start the process of a RMA, they require an order number. This is to ensure that the phone was purchased from Google or an authorized reseller. So is Google being nice and not verifying the phone was even purchased before authorizing the RMA, or are people simply omitting the fact the order number is required when mentioning that they received a RMA?