Remarked Celerons Sold As P4s 273
Lam1969 writes "Sumner Lemon reports that a Chinese company, Shenzhen Chuanghui Electronics Co., is remarking Celeron chips as Pentium 4s and supplying software to mask the chips' real pedigree from operating systems. From the article : 'The remarked processors Chuanghui sells are actually 1.7-GHz Celeron chips and are currently available for $78 each, including a motherboard, in quantities of 100 or more, said James Zhan, a company representative named online as a contact for potential buyers. By comparison, Intel sells the real thing for $401 in 1,000-unit quantities without a motherboard, according to the company's most recent price list.'"
Bizarre quote... (Score:2, Funny)
Er yes.. but of course the difference is you're actually getting a genuine Intel chip running at 3.4GHz.. and not a chip with a sticker on it that says its a 3.4GHz when in fact its only a 1.7GHz!
Re:Bizarre quote... (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Bizarre quote... (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Bizarre quote... (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Bizarre quote... (Score:5, Funny)
You are Chineese Off-shorers are loosing their credibility! What you say?
I didn't know it needed to be tightened anyway
Re:Bizarre quote... (Score:3, Funny)
Great stuff! (Score:2, Interesting)
If they actually include a motherboard with a halfway decent chipset, I'd probably buy one of those combos at 70US$ regardless of their fraudulent business practises, though.
Re:Great stuff! (Score:5, Insightful)
Then you are also part of the problem.
Consumers supporting known businesses which have no ethic drive the good businesses with ethics out of business. Why don't you just see what hardware Microsoft has to offer you for your evangelical services?
Re:Great stuff! (Score:3, Informative)
More seriously, there is actually a way past a lot of this. The fraudulent vendor may have replaced the BIOS on the motherboards, to lie about the specs of the hardware to the display screens and in turn to the operating system. Some interesting hacks are available that way to set the system clocks to one speed, and lie about it to the OS. Alternatively, they've simply replaced the bits of Windows that display the processor characteristics.
To get past the
Re:Great stuff! (Score:4, Funny)
IBM dual 2.0GHz Xeon workstation w/ HW SCSI RAID 0/1/5 for sale
Is that a link to an example, or just an unfortunate coincidence?
Re:Great stuff! (Score:2)
Re:Great stuff! (Score:2)
What you describe is the unethical use of business technology, not the unethical business.
Re:Great stuff! (Score:2)
Re:Great stuff! (Score:3, Interesting)
And even if they did provide kernel patches for linux preinstalled PCs, it wouldn't work. The scam would show on your next kernel update.
This targets only windows users. The ones who never install another OS or have never removed their cpu from the m/b.
Re:Great stuff! (Score:2)
Silly Asians (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Great stuff! (Score:2, Insightful)
No attempt to hide ? (Score:5, Insightful)
I wonder why they're offering the masking software then ?
On another note, how do they plan to mask it on non-Windows OSs.
Re:No attempt to hide ? (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:No attempt to hide ? (Score:2)
Re:No attempt to hide ? (Score:3, Interesting)
I wonder how long they will get away with this. In most western countries, I think they could be indicted for some form of "aiding and abetting" of criminal activities.
Re:No attempt to hide ? (Score:2)
As long as there is money in the bribe account.
Re:No attempt to hide ? (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:No attempt to hide ? (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:No attempt to hide ? (Score:5, Informative)
They're offering the masking software because some unscrupulous OEM (the sort who sells people pre-built computers with $7 power supplies so they know they'll be back in the shop soon) will buy these rebranded Celerons and sell them to consumers as the real deal.
I'd imagine that they don't really worry about masking it on non-Windows OSes, since the proportion of users that buys a machine from a vendor like this and puts Linux or something on it is likely rather small. The people buying from this sort of vendor aren't techies, or even really mass market; techies would be buying parts individually (and hopefully from a reputable vendor) or, like the majority of consumers, buying from Dell or HP or whichever big OEM is offering the best deal at the time.
This is an annoying, amoral practice, but it's not really any different from scams in any other industry. The solution is, as always, to buy from people you know and trust and avoid Comps'R'Us, no matter how sweet the deal seems.
Re:No attempt to hide ? (Score:4, Insightful)
In fact, in 99% of the cases, this would be meant only for these unscrupulous OEMs (1% to take the theoretical possiblity of someone trying to fool their friends that he's got a high end machine)
IANAL but facilitating a crime (very obviously here), is itself a crime in most of the countries, AFAIK.
I'm surprised at their audacity to openly claim all this, and to top it all, justify it. Lets not confuse audacity with honesty here. They are not honest guys and should be taken to task for this.
Re:No attempt to hide ? (Score:5, Funny)
Is anything a crime in China? I mean, apart from free speech?
Re:No attempt to hide ? (Score:2)
I believe paying american artists and producers of music and movies for rights is against the law? Near as I can tell they only allow one copy into the country for ripping purposes. I say we get our revenge by only allowing them to buy copies of current releases. The miserable quality of current films will have them crying uncle in no time and we can finally get fair distribution laws. We could get really nasty and only allow remakes and sequel
Re:No attempt to hide ? (Score:2)
Re:No attempt to hide ? (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:No attempt to hide ? (Score:4, Interesting)
On another note, how do they plan to mask it on non-Windows OSs.
I saw this in the article:
"Chuanghui handles the remarking of the Celeron chips itself, Zhan said. In addition, the company provides buyers with software that masks the identify of the remarked Celerons from a computer's BIOS and Microsoft Corp.'s Windows XP operating system, fooling the software into believing the chip is actually a 3.6-GHz Pentium 4 processor, he said."
So, this explains why they're selling it with the motherboard, as it's a major component of the scam: they're masking the chip's speed at the BIOS level, probably with some sort of hack to the mobo's BIOS. The interesting thing, then is that any CPUID program would probably misdetect the chip, regardless of the OS. But put the chip into another motherboard, and you'd probably detect the correct chip type.
At least, that was my impression. -- Paul
Hypocrite (Score:5, Insightful)
> But Zhan acknowledged that Chuanghui has no control over how its customers represent the remarked chips when they resell them.
Maybe I can help him out with an argument there. Obviously, the "remarked" Celerons are more expensive, since he is selling the service of remarking. The chip itself is not changed: it is still as dead slow as it always was. Charging a premium price is obviously only possible if you trick your customer, which of course means selling the "remarked" Celeron as a P4. So by setting the pricing structure of the product he makes sure that the product can only be resold using fraud.
Claiming ignorance is not going to help there, it remains a big scam. Remember the empty cache ICs in 486 boards? This is no different.
Re:Hypocrite (Score:2)
What happened?
Re:Hypocrite (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Unauthorized use of logos (Score:2, Troll)
US law doesn't apply there.
Re:Unauthorized use of logos (Score:2)
Re:Unauthorized use of logos (Score:3, Informative)
One treaty China has signed is the Berne convention, making copyright infringement illegal in China. The only reason it remains rampant is the is little enforcement other than token displays to appease other treaty signatories.
The real question (Score:2, Funny)
Re:The real question (Score:2, Funny)
Re:The real question (Score:2)
And lets not forget the motherboard counterfit capactior thing
Re:The real question (Score:2)
Piece of Cake (Score:3, Funny)
1 - 2 - 3 - 4 -
2,367,194,218? Wait a second, this is an AMD chip!
Re:The real question (Score:2)
Can't we simply read it there ?
Exactly. But what's there is what the BIOS reports. The software mentioned in the article is a hacked BIOS that misrepresents the CPU. When I had an Athlon XP 1700+ (which runs at 1433 MHz) which I overclocked by setting the FSB to 139 MHz. BIOS and Windows then said it was an 1800+
The company sells to PC builders who then sell to consumers. The PC builders know they are buying fakes, and sell them
more details anyone? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:more details anyone? (Score:5, Informative)
A lot of people think that manufacturers just enable/disable functionality and sell them as premium/standard offerings. This is a wrong thought.
Caches take a decent amount of silicon. Very often the silicon yeild is not good, in which case caches are not 100% reliable, which is why they are instead marked as disabled, and the chip sold at a lower rate.
Even if you manage to enable these caches, they may not work for you reliably.
Re:more details anyone? (Score:3, Interesting)
But isn't it a completely different socket? (Score:5, Insightful)
Surely this will only work until someone with half a clue actually opens their case, won't it? What good is a sticker when a the chips, the mountings, and the heat-sink bracket are different between the celeron and p4?
Re:But isn't it a completely different socket? (Score:5, Insightful)
How many people really have "half a clue?" First, go out on the street and randomly ask people about current events, a few historical figures, a couple of science questions, and geography. Almost too many news programs to count have found that most people are pretty ignorant of the world around them and history. You'll get the same result. Next, ask them what's the difference between a Socket 478 and an LGA775. How long would it take until someone on the street can answer this?
Re:But isn't it a completely different socket? (Score:5, Interesting)
In fact, I wouldn't be able to answer this question right now, and I'm a programmer/sysadmin who sets up several servers per year. We simply have hardware people, and I get a ready box where my intervention doesn't exceed attaching a disk.
Of course, the last time I built a computer myself, a P2-era Celeron 300A oc/ed to 375, I researched such issues. But nowadays, I simply don't have time to deal with the hardware -- other people are paid to do that. I wouldn't notice the scam in the article unless I happen to glance at the messages during a system boot or notice the discrepancy while resolving some driver problem (non-Windows), or somehow notice that the system is way slower than it should be.
So... if an experienced person who just doesn't deal with hardware wouldn't spot this scam on the first glance, how would a layman get it?
Re:But isn't it a completely different socket? (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:But isn't it a completely different socket? (Score:2)
I have been programming for the past 30 years. I always opened the case up to see what is inside, even with mainframes. You are missing the beauty of technology solution and emotional feeling of touching the real hardware. How could you tune your software up to maximum out of possible without knowing your chips?
Re:But isn't it a completely different socket? (Score:2, Informative)
scams 'r' us (Score:5, Insightful)
The "lots of 100" is the worrier---it means they'll most likely go to dishonest resellers and system builders only too happy to hide the missing $322 in markup.
Same Ploy, Different Century. (Score:5, Interesting)
But it's not just the Chinese (Score:3, Interesting)
A certain british PC vendor whom I won't name, but they're not huge (wink, wink) are notorious for boxes which do not contain their advertised contents. However they get away with it because Mum and Pop don't know how to check and are grateful that they got a 'bargain'.
Re:But it's not just the Chinese (Score:2)
Just so everybody is clear. He is talking about Tiny.
Re:But it's not just the Chinese (Score:2)
Re:But it's not just the Chinese (Score:2)
Re:But it's not just the Chinese (Score:2)
Re:But it's not just the Chinese (Score:2)
You are wrong. Resellers like CDW can install "new" IBM-branded memory into new non-IBM machines before the machine is delivered to a customer. Not saying that is what happened here, but it is totally possible.
Re:But it's not just the Chinese (Score:2)
AMD Power! (Score:5, Funny)
Zeb
Re:AMD Power! (Score:2)
What about CPUID? (Score:2)
Unless there is something I am not following, CPUID is executed entirely inside the processor and is impossible to fake.
Re:What about CPUID? (Score:3, Informative)
Re:What about CPUID? (Score:3, Funny)
I would love to see them change it to "This is a fake CPU and you paid over the odds for it you complete and utter mug!!"... and see how many of their customers noticed!
ROM interceptor on the Motherboard? (Score:2)
O..k.. (Score:2, Insightful)
I can't help but wonder, then, why bother masking the CPU's at all?
Re:O..k.. (Score:3, Insightful)
Because they aren't selling them to end users? They're going to sell them to someone who will build PC's and sell them as P4's. Of course Chuanghui is completely upfront with whoever they sell to -- that's because they're complicit in the fraud that's going to occur.
similar subject ... (Score:2, Interesting)
reminds me of Packard-Bell (Score:2)
"Zhan defended Chuanghui's sale of remarked chips, saying the company makes no attempt to hide what was done to the chips or to pass them off as more valuable processors. "I tell them the truth," he said."
Except for the fact that they remark them, they don't hide anything. Wait..does this even make sense?
Sandra (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Sandra (Score:2, Insightful)
Big mistake. You should have gotten your money back and went elsewhere. What good is a warantee from a company you cant trust?
If he didn't want to return the money, have a local TV station do a special on your bogus computer. Then take him to small claims court.
Re:Sandra (Score:2)
Let's not be too hard on them. (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Let's not be too hard on them. (Score:2, Informative)
But for most customers it makes no difference (Score:2)
Re:But for most customers it makes no difference (Score:2)
Do you have any source at all to back that up?
In any case, that would be no good reason to commit fraud.
The point is this (Score:2)
Caveat Emptor (Score:5, Interesting)
Our company buys wholesale quantities of electronic components, occasionally (but warily) from the Shenzen region of China. We have received re-marked and counterfeit parts which are accurate enough to get by our modest QA process. In one instance, a military customer of ours discovered a very expensive counterfeit part via industrial X-Ray before mounting it on their boards. As a result, we lost face with a good customer and had to take legal action to get our money back from our stateside supplier. Our supplier was stuck with the bill, as they purchased/imported the parts from Shenzen.
What ever you do, never pay up front. This sounds like a no brainer, but these people will feed on the buyer's desperation. If they won't accept NET 1 terms, then run away. Once a deal goes bad, you have no legal recourse. Buyer Beware.
How this could be 100% okay (Score:5, Interesting)
But the sales department comes to you with a sad face. You made 85,000 3.4 GHz CPU's, but they have orders for only 1,000 of those, the rest of the orders are for 2GHz chips.
Guess what they tell you to do?: Run out to the asemmbly line and quickly push the buttons to label and blow the chip fuses so they advertise themselves as the lower speed grade. Seems like a waste, but it keeps the customers and accountants happy.
Happens all the time. I recently bought a batch of "300 volt" transistors. On the tester they all measured out at 650 to 670 volts.
So there's a *slight* chance these guys have a batch of underlabeled CPU's.
Re:How this could be 100% okay (Score:2)
What about cache? (Score:5, Insightful)
They may be properly speed-graded, but what about the cache?
Or are you saying these are Celerons that just happen to have 512K L2 cache?
It's a subtle difference... (Score:2)
Not at all surprising (Score:5, Informative)
When we arrived, my wife's dad told us not to buy tea in small towns, because he had seen a report on CCTV (China Central Television) saying that people were taking other leaves, dying them with green dye and using formaldehyde to cover the smell, then cutting that with a small amount of real tea. We laughed - until it happened. We brought them back a small canister of "best quality" tea that we'd picked up on our Yangtze River cruise. When they steeped it, the water turned bright, neon green. We looked closely - it was *not* tea. We don't know what it was, but it went in the toilet. Mind you, most of the people on our cruise were Chinese nationals, not outsiders!
One of my own coworkers who is Chinese has told that you can't even trust bottled water - there have been reports of companies filling the bottles with tap water (unboiled, of course) and just sealing the lid, and selling it with fake Chinese "brand" labels. We found some bottles with suspicious lids, just buying from regular markets. I'm thinking my lucky stars that I didn't get sick.
It's a bit scary. There's a certain level of trust required for capitalism to thrive. China has the capitalism in spades; but not the trust. It's absolutely the Wild, Wild East over there.
Re:Not at all surprising (Score:3, Insightful)
The scams you talk about are no different from the snake-oil scams of the late 19th and early 20th centuries in the USA. What ended them? It wasn't trust. It was government regulation.
Re:Not at all surprising (Score:3, Insightful)
>>read the label on their own brank bottled water.
The differences being of course that a) at least Wal-Mart is honest about it; and more importantly, b) you can be reasonably sure that the water has at least run through a modern filtration system. Compare with a bottle of water that a) claims to be spring water, but is not; because b) it's actually from some random, unfiltered, unboiled, and more-than-likely contaminated water source. Imagine the fun th
A rose by any other name... (Score:2, Interesting)
Iridium Point Germany (Score:3, Interesting)
So... (Score:2)
Fake P4s, Fake Gucci. Same diff. (Score:3, Insightful)
Happened with me once (Score:3, Interesting)
But it happened with an AMD processor.
I've bought an AMD Atlhon XP 2500+ Barton, I've saw the box and the label, and also have checked the OPN (part number). When checking the processor using AMD's tool I've discovered that it was an AMD Athlon XP 2400+ TBread, less cache and slower CPU.
Re:How long did you think it was going to take? (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Yawn (Score:5, Insightful)
Yours is one of the most idiotic and mind-numbingly baffling class of comments one can find on Slashdot (and that's saying something!).
Putting aside the fact that you clearly have no understanding of what constitutes news, the fact that you don't find fraud to be a "big deal" is revolting. If you bought a PC from Dell (for example) that was fraudulently mislabeled like the ones in this story, would you just shrug it off and say, "big deal"? Or would you be pissed? Really pissed, and demand not only a refund (or at least, hardware that matches what you paid for), but also look into possible legal actions you might take, as well as, say, thinking it worthwhile to inform others about the fraud?
Not only is this news, but it's also worth alerting others to as well. If fraud is routinely shrugged off as normal and not reported on, there will be less reason to *not* engage in fraud.
Re:Disclosure (Score:3, Insightful)
No, this is collusion.
They cannot argue there is any legitemate reason to do this. Just because they are providing someone else with the tools to rip you off doesn't make them any less complicit in the act.
Re:Disclosure (Score:4, Insightful)
Goofy analogy. No, when someone sells you a computer, they don't know that you'll use it to pirate music, or commit identity theft, or whatever - maybe you will, maybe you won't, and they don't have any control over it regardless. When these guys sell a thousand of their chips to some computer manufacturer, they know goddamn well that the buyer is going to use these things to rip people off - that's the only possible reason someone would buy these things, to rip people off.
Re:Disclosure (Score:3, Insightful)
is put into a beige box and sold on as a P4, when really it's a Celeron.
The reseller of the beige-box is unlikely to advise their customers that
they're being done. However, if a customer takes the beige box back to
the shop, then the reseller could deny that they knew that the rebranding
was their fault.
It's a scam. I hope Intel sues!
Re:Free Trade in action (Score:5, Insightful)
No, this is exactly not an example of free trade. Fraud is not a component of free trade. A market economy depends on the customer's ability to actually get what's purchased. Scam artists like the Chinese company in question are parasitically abusing a free market's expectation of consistency and reliability in a brand (Intel, in this case), and the only people who call such BS examples of a free market are those who don't want a free market.
it sure shows one of the limitations of outsourcing to the cheapest source
No, this is not the cheapest source. It's a person lying about being the cheapest source. That doesn't show the limitation of bidding out your purchases, it shows the problems inherent in dealing with "businesses" in a country that, at the highest levels, encourages rampant copyright/brand scams.
You get what you pay for!
No, you get what's delivered to you. If what's delivered is fake, then you did not get what you paid for. In most western countries, one of the things we do pay for is a law enforcement framework that doesn't much put up with the fraudulent sales of such items. Since that's not being paid for in China, people doing business there frequently get exactly what's not being paid for.
I wonder who will be checking the authenticity of those upcoming Olympic medals?
Re:Free Trade in action (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Shenzhen Chuanghui Electronics esse delendam (Score:2, Insightful)