Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Phones
  3. Android
  4. Business
  5. Mobile
  6. News

A consumer group sues Samsung for not updating Android on 82 percent of its phones

Add as a preferred source on Google

Samsung has been sued by the Dutch Consumers’ Association for a lack of timely updates to its smartphones. The consumer watchdog said Samsung did not provide an update to the latest Android version for 82 percent of the smartphones it launched in the last two years.

The DCA is demanding more updates to Samsung devices that are on sale in the country. It also wants the South Korean mobile giant to be more transparent on how long a smartphone will be supported, and give a timeframe for when consumers can expect an update.

Recommended Videos

“On buying a Samsung Android device, consumers are given inadequate information about how long they will continue to receive software updates,” said Bart Combée, director of the DCA. “The [DCA] is demanding that Samsung provide its customers with clear and unambiguous information about this. Samsung moreover provides insufficient information about critical security vulnerabilities, such as Stagefright, in its Android phones. Finally, the [DCA] is demanding that Samsung actually provide its smartphones with updates.”

Samsung is not the only manufacturer failing to provide updates, but the DCA says it’s targeting the company due to Samsung’s 80-percent market share in the country. We suspect any new laws enforced after the lawsuit would be broadly applied to all manufacturers working in the Netherlands. At this point, it’s unclear who will win the battle or if Samsung will change its behavior.

The DCA started an update campaign on July 2015, encouraging Android manufacturers to update devices and keep consumers informed on future updates and security patches. It seems the watchdog is not happy with the progress of the campaign, and is now taking legal action to ensure the largest smartphone vendor in the country takes notice.

It is not the first time a government has intervened to fight for smartphone consumers. Two years ago the South Korean government announced new guidelines for the smartphone industry to make bloatware removable. A few European governments have been more focused on privacy and security, however, while the UK government recently published the third draft of the Snooper’s Charter, an act that would see user information stored for a full year.

David Curry
Former Contributor
David has been writing about technology for several years, following the latest trends and covering the largest events. He is…
Apple wants you to verify your identity before you get Education discount on products
Apple moving the US Education Store off the honor system also seems about making a globally consistent verification infrastructure that could eventually support more aggressive Education Store expansion.
Computer, Electronics, Laptop

Getting an Apple Education discount in the United States used to be as simple as claiming you’re a student or a teacher; it didn’t need a formal verification. That era is officially over. 

Starting May 8, 2026, Apple now requires formal identity verification for all Education Store purchases in the US, ending the informal honor system that was in place for years (via MacRumors). 

Read more
Whoop’s response to Fitbit Air and Google Health is real doctors, not just an AI chatbot.
In the race to own your health data, Google chose an AI, and Whoop chose a doctor. That single decision may define which fitness tracker serious health users reach for in 2026 and beyond.
A person wearing the Whoop 5.0.

Recently, Google launched the Fitbit Air as a direct rival to the Whoop screenless fitness band, rebranded the Fitbit app to Google Health, and released a Gemini-powered AI coach. Exactly one day later, Whoop has responded with on-demand video consultations with licensed clinicians for US users. 

The contrast is hard to ignore. While Google is betting on AI as your general health advisor, Whoop is doubling down on real, licensed doctors, and making the case that they can serve its fitness-focused users considerably better (via CNBC).

Read more
Apple leak prophesizes a Spatial iPhone with a holographic 3D screen. It’s about time!
Samsung is reportedly building the holographic display, with a tentative 2030 target.
Apple-spatial-iphone-concept-image

Holograms on your iPhone sound like science fiction. But according to a fresh leak, Apple may actually be working on it. A leaker on X known as "Schrödinger" claims Apple is developing a "Spatial iPhone" with a holographic display, reportedly being built by Samsung.

The display is codenamed "MH1" (Mobile Holographic 1), and the details being floated are quite wild. You should take all of this with appropriate skepticism, though, as none of it is officially confirmed.

Read more