Spotify gives in, will refund Car Thing buyers following criticism

Shawn Knight

Posts: 15,351   +193
Staff member
In a nutshell: Spotify has started issuing full refunds to Car Thing owners after receiving numerous complains following a recent announcement that the device would reach end-of-life status and be rendered useless later this year.

It's been roughly one week since Spotify announced it would be shutting down Car Thing in December, and it didn't take long for the complaints to start pouring in. A company representative told Engadget on Thursday of this week that as of last Friday (May 24), customers with proof of purchase could reach out to customer service for a full refund.

Spotify originally said they had no plans to offer a replacement or new version of the device, nor would they be offering any trade-in options or subscriber credit. Some, however, were reportedly able to get Spotify Premium credits from customer service reps for their troubles.

Others took to social media to voice their concerns, while a select group went the legal route by filing a class action lawsuit in Manhattan federal court. According to Billboard, the suit was filed on May 28 although Spotify claims it started issuing refunds days earlier.

It's easy to see why Car Thing owners are upset. Spotify started testing the device with a limited number of users in 2019 before rolling it out to the general public in early 2022. Later that year, the company quietly discontinued the gadget due to weak demand and supply chain issues, but continued to sell it at a discount on its website.

Car Thing has worked as advertised ever since, but that'll change later this year. Spotify is pulling the plug on December 9, and after that it will no longer be operational. Owners are encouraged to reset the device to factory settings and safely dispose of it following local electronic waste guidelines.

Personally, I'd hang on to it in hopes of the community one day figuring out how to unlock its full potential for other uses. It's a neat gadget with loads of promise, and sending it to an early grave seems unjust.

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Some people have complained the Spotify should at least provide an opensource SDK to let people hack this device into something useful instead of turning it into e-waste. But it's very underpowered, with a lower-end Amlogic chip, the S905D2 paired with only 500 MB of RAM so it wouldn't be very useful as anything other than what it was designed to be, which is just a simple way to control the Spotify app on your phone.
 
Good.

Now if only they could give it to the open source community so it's not e-waste.
There is SO much e-waste in electronics manufacturing. Things like this really annoy me.
It's crazy how much product gets sent to WEEE. I'm currently sat with 200 fully working circuit boards for a customer valued at £130 each. The customer no longer wants to take them due to a change in design (functionally they're the same). They're a large company, so I guess they'd rather take the hit than support old design. These will just end up in the WEE bin.
Another of our customers won't accept repairs. Even if it's something simple like a damaged connector. They send back handfuls of boards every month damaged by their installers for WEEE disposal. We could easily replace damaged parts and retest, but we just throw them away.
 
"Engadget on Thursday of this week that as of last Friday (May 24), customers with proof of purchase could reach out to customer service for a full refund." <------------- In my day, this was the norm. You didn't have to complain about a company blunder, they would automatically refund the money.

Not automatically forwarding refunds is an arrogant, entitled, generational thing nowadays, to be sure... Welcome to the wonderful world of too many Millennials, and most certainly Gen Z's....
 
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