
Working Poor C USB cables can completely destroy your phone. Google engineer Benson Leung has therefore undertaken to personally check the quality of all USB-C cable he gets owned. Moreover, Amazon has changed the rules for sellers. Who sells a non-compliant USB-C cable may be liable to a penalty.
Despite this slip still dangerous cables through the meshes of the net. The USB Implementers Forum (USB-IF), therefore, has found a new way to protect your device from bad C USB cables. Namely the group has devised a USB Type-C Authentication specification.
C USB cables and devices approved by the USB-IF will be able to show this using the new specification to know the device with which they are associated. This process will occur immediately when you plug a cable into your phone. This is to ensure that you gear damage is causes by a cable that delivers too much power. Also you will can regulate itself to determine what connected USB-C devices can and can not do.
For those who already have purchased a USB-C Cable, comes the launch of the specification too late . The new protocol will, after all, are not yet added to the cable. However, it may be possible for a software update to USB-C devices to deploy. How fast is rolled USB Type-C Authentication specification for devices, however, depend on the manufacturers themselves will.
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