The European Union has recently introduced a series of ecodesign regulations aimed at combating planned obsolescence and ensuring a longer lifespan for electronic devices.
The goal is to force manufacturers to support their own smartphones for a longer period, thereby reducing electronic waste.
However, a closer analysis of the regulatory text has revealed a gray area, a real bureaucratic loophole that risks undermining, at least in part, the intentions of the legislator.
It seems that the wording of the rules allows brands to circumvent the obligation to provide new versions of the operating system, while remaining formally compliant with the law.
The core issue lies in a specific clause of the regulation regarding operating system updates. The text states that, from the date of market withdrawal and for at least five years thereafter, manufacturers must make updates available “if” they provide them.
It is precisely that conditional conjunction that changes the game. The rule does not explicitly require the creation of new updates, but simply obliges to keep those that the manufacturer may decide to develop available and free.
In practical terms, this means that if a company chooses not to produce any new feature or fix, there is no obligation to distribute.
Motorola seems to be among the first manufacturers to have grasped this semantic nuance, applying it concretely in its commercial strategies. The launch of devices such as the Moto g17 is tangible proof: for this model, the company guarantees five years of security updates, but has decided to not provide any advancement of the Android operating system version.
A move that, in the eyes of consumers, may seem questionable, but finds a solid legal justification in the literal interpretation of European directives.
This policy creates a significant precedent. Providing security patches is a less burdensome commitment than developing and adapting full new versions of Android.
By limiting itself to security fixes, Motorola technically respects the five-year time requirement, but empties of meaning the idea of a device staying “current” over time.
The phone will remain secure, of course, but its software features will remain frozen as of the purchase date, aging much faster than the hardware.
To confirm that this is not mere speculation or a risky move by a single brand, the voices of the institutions have arrived as well. The Finnish portal After Dawn has consulted the competent local authorities to obtain clarification on the interpretation of Ecodesign regulations.
The answer was unequivocal: manufacturers are not obliged to produce new updates. The obligation concerns exclusively the availability for five years of security, corrective or functional updates that already exist or were deliberately created. In short, the law requires the availability of the software, not its ongoing development.
This interpretation opens up complex scenarios for the future of mobile telephony in the Old Continent. The risk is that other manufacturers, especially in the low and mid-range market where margins are tight, may follow Motorola’s example, offering minimal software support to contain costs.
However, this strategy could prove to be a double-edged sword. In a highly competitive market, where giants like Samsung and Google have made long-term software support (up to seven years of complete updates) a pillar of their marketing, offering devices that are born “old” could alienate consumer trust.
It remains to be seen whether the European Commission will intervene to correct course and close this regulatory gap, making the update obligation not only a matter of availability but of concrete product evolution.
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