An Honest Review of Cupertino's Greatest Grift

Think
Pay.

Apple. Beautifully overpriced. Courageously fragile. Securing your children's data while extracting your wallet with surgical precision since 1976.

$699 for 4 wheels $999 monitor stand. Not included. $19 polishing cloth Throttled your old phone on purpose Butterfly keyboards that die if you breathe on them Charger not included Fights your right to repair it
See All the Crimes

* Starting at $1,299. Stand, wheels, cable, and dignity sold separately.

  WHEELS: $699  ★  MONITOR STAND: $999 (NOT INCLUDED WITH $4,999 MONITOR)  ★  POLISHING CLOTH: $19  ★  THROTTLED YOUR OLD IPHONE ON PURPOSE  ★  BUTTERFLY KEYBOARD: DIES IF A CRUMB LOOKS AT IT  ★  BENDGATE  ★  ANTENNAGATE  ★  MAPS SENT PEOPLE INTO THE OCEAN  ★  30% APP STORE TAX  ★  REMOVED HEADPHONE JACK. SOLD YOU AIRPODS.  ★  REMOVED CHARGER. KEPT THE PRICE.  ★  REPAIRS COST MORE THAN A NEW PHONE  ★  FIGHTS RIGHT TO REPAIR  ★  "SECURITY" WHILE TRACKING YOUR EVERY TAP  ★  WHEELS: $699  ★  MONITOR STAND: $999 (NOT INCLUDED WITH $4,999 MONITOR)  ★  POLISHING CLOTH: $19  ★  THROTTLED YOUR OLD IPHONE ON PURPOSE  ★  BUTTERFLY KEYBOARD: DIES IF A CRUMB LOOKS AT IT  ★ 
🖼️
Pro Display XDR
$4,999 Monitor. Stand Not Included.
You'll buy the greatest monitor Apple makes. You will then discover it ships with a VESA mount. The stand — a metal rod — is $999 extra. Separately. On purpose.
$4,999 + $999 stand
Stand sold separately like it's a Barbie
"The nano-texture glass option is an extra $1,000. Do not clean it with anything except Apple's $19 cloth."
🧹
Apple Polishing Cloth
A Cloth. Nineteen Dollars. A Cloth.
Apple sells a microfibre cloth — the kind that costs $1.50 at any pharmacy — for $19. It has the Apple logo on it. That's the whole product. It's a cloth.
$19 Actual value: $1.50
1,166% fabric premium
It sold out. People panic-bought it. We are not making this up.
📞
iPhone 16 Pro Max
$1,199. Charger Not Included.
Apple removed the charger from the box in 2020. They cited environmental concerns. They also did not lower the price. They patted themselves on the back in a press release.
$1,199 + $29 cable
Eco-friendly (for Apple's margins)
The charger brick is $29. The cable is $29. The phone will not charge from a non-Apple cable at full speed. Courage.
✏️
Apple Pencil (USB-C)
Charges Via Dongle. Sold Separately.
The $79 Apple Pencil (USB-C) does not attach magnetically. It does not charge wirelessly. It charges by sticking a dongle into the bottom of the iPad. In 2024.
$79
Charges like it's 2009
Apple sells three different Apple Pencils at three different price points with three different incompatible charging methods. Collect them all.
📱
iCloud Storage
5GB Free. For One Photo.
Your iPhone takes 48-megapixel ProRAW photos. Your free iCloud storage is 5GB. At Apple's photo sizes, that's roughly 85 photos. Then they want $2.99/month. Forever.
$2.99/mo Just for 50GB
A subscription to your own photos
Google Photos offers 15GB free. Backblaze backs up your entire computer for $9/month. Apple: $2.99 for 50GB. But it's "integrated."
🔢
Apple Genius Bar Repair
$549 to Replace a Screen. Out of Warranty.
Cracked your iPhone 15 Pro screen? Without AppleCare: $379. Back glass? $549. Battery? $99. Apple also uses software locks to make third-party parts report errors even if perfectly functional.
$549 Back glass replacement
Cheaper to buy a new Android
Apple has lobbied against Right to Repair legislation in multiple US states. Your phone. Their rules. Their prices.

"But It's Secure."
The Parent Trap.

Apple has convinced an entire generation of parents that iPhones are the "safe" choice for children. Let's look at what "safe" actually means in Cupertino.

🔒
"Apple is more secure than Android."
Apple collects a staggering amount of data about you and your child — app usage, location, Siri queries, browsing history, purchase patterns, and more — all routed through Apple's servers. Their privacy settings are buried six menus deep and default to "share." The App Store charges developers a 30% tax, which gets passed to you and your kids on every app purchase and in-app transaction.
👧
"Kids are safe on iPhone because of parental controls."
Screen Time parental controls have been documented as trivially bypassable since their introduction. Children have discovered workarounds shared freely on YouTube. Apple was slow to patch them. Meanwhile, the App Store approved and profited from apps with dark-pattern in-app purchases designed specifically to extract money from children — until lawsuits forced change.
📲
"My child needs an iPhone to fit in at school."
Apple has actively cultivated peer pressure as a sales strategy. The green bubble/blue bubble iMessage distinction is an intentional design choice to socially stigmatize non-iPhone users, particularly among teenagers. Apple was directly asked to fix this and refused. The EU eventually forced them to open iMessage. Apple complied minimally. The strategy works: parents spend $800+ so their 12-year-old has a blue bubble.
💪
"Apple products last longer so they're worth the price."
In 2017, Apple was caught deliberately slowing down older iPhones via software updates — a practice they called "performance management" and everyone else called what it is: planned obsolescence. They paid $500 million to settle the class-action lawsuit. They still do not proactively tell users when they're doing it. Your child's $800 phone will feel inexplicably sluggish in 2 years.
💰
"It's an investment in their education."
A base iPhone 16 is $799. Add AppleCare ($199). A case ($50). AirPods because your child will inevitably lose them ($179). Replace the AirPods they lost ($179). iCloud because 5GB fills up in a week ($35/yr). In two years your "investment" is $1,441+. A Chromebook costs $300 and does more for school. But it has a green bubble.

Premium Price.
Surprising Fragility.

For the price of a used car, you'd expect bulletproof quality. Apple's track record tells a different story.

⌨ The Butterfly Keyboard (2016–2019)

Apple redesigned the MacBook keyboard to be thinner. The result: a keyboard so fragile that a single speck of dust could cause keys to stop working or repeat uncontrollably. It affected millions of laptops. Apple denied the problem for years, then quietly replaced them via a repair program they never admitted was a recall.

Class action settled

🛒 iPhone 6 Bendgate (2014)

The iPhone 6 Plus would bend — permanently — simply from being carried in a front pocket. Not dropped. Not sat on. Just carried. Apple's response: demonstrated the bend required 70 lbs of pressure. Consumer Reports showed it bent at 35 lbs. Whose jeans apply 35 lbs to their phone? Everyone's.

Design defect denied

📡 Antennagate: Don't Hold It Wrong (2010)

The iPhone 4 would drop calls if you held it in your left hand — the natural way most humans hold phones. Signal dropped because your hand covered the antenna. Steve Jobs' solution at a press conference: "Avoid holding it in that way." Apple eventually gave out free bumper cases.

Steve said hold it differently

🗻 Apple Maps (2012)

Apple replaced Google Maps with their own app. The app directed drivers onto airport runways, placed cities in the ocean, and gave walking directions through rivers. The CEO of Australia's Victorian police force issued a public safety warning. Tim Cook apologized and recommended people use Google Maps — Apple's competitor.

CEO publicly apologized

🔋 AirTag Stalking Crisis (2021–)

Apple's tiny tracking device — marketed for finding keys — became a stalking tool almost immediately. Abusers slipped them into victims' bags and cars. Apple's anti-stalking alerts were delayed, quiet, and on the stalker's phone. Domestic violence organizations reported a surge of cases. Apple updated the software. The problem continues.

Ongoing legal challenges

💺 Batterygate / Throttlegate (2017)

Apple admitted they had been slowing down iPhones with aging batteries via silent software updates — without telling users. The stated reason: prevent unexpected shutdowns. The observed effect: phones felt broken, people bought new ones. Apple paid $500M in settlement. Individual users received roughly $25 each.

$500M settlement

🔌 No Right to Repair Your Own Device

Apple uses software "parts pairing" to ensure that even genuine Apple replacement parts — screens, batteries, cameras — will trigger error warnings unless paired by Apple's system. A working Apple battery installed by a third-party shop will show "Service Recommended." Apple has fought right-to-repair legislation in states across the US.

Lobbied against your rights

🆕 30% App Store Tax (Ongoing)

Every app on your iPhone pays Apple 30% of subscription revenue and in-app purchases. That cost is passed directly to you. Spotify costs more on iOS than on Android because of Apple's cut. Epic sued. Netflix quietly removed the ability to subscribe in-app. Apple earned $85 billion in "Services" revenue in 2023. You paid for it.

Under EU antitrust investigation

💃 FaceTime Bug Eavesdrop (2019)

A bug in FaceTime allowed callers to hear audio from the recipient's phone before the call was accepted — effectively eavesdropping on people who hadn't picked up yet. A teenager discovered it. Apple was warned. They disabled Group FaceTime for a week, fixed it quietly, and moved on. This is the "most secure" platform.

Bug went unfixed for days

The Cupertino
Scandal Timeline

A brief and incomplete history of Apple's greatest moments.

2007
iPhone Launched. Price Dropped $200 Two Months Later.
Early adopters paid $599. Apple cut the price to $399 in September — 66 days after launch. Thousands of furious customers. Apple offered a $100 store credit. Not a refund. A credit. To buy more Apple products.
2010
Antennagate: "You're Holding It Wrong"
iPhone 4 dropped calls when held naturally. Steve Jobs told the world they were holding their phones incorrectly. A masterclass in blaming the customer for a manufacturing defect.
2012
Maps Sends People Into the Desert
Apple Maps launched. Roads appeared in wrong places. Cities were missing. Australian police issued a public safety warning after people got stranded following Apple's directions in a national park.
2014
Bendgate: Premium Aluminum Pretzels
The iPhone 6 Plus bent from the pressure of a pocket. Apple claimed it was within their tolerance. Consumers discovered the tolerance included "becomes a banana."
2014
U2 Album Force-Installed on 500 Million iPhones
Apple and U2 "gifted" an album to 500 million iTunes users — by automatically adding it to their libraries. People could not delete it. Apple had to release a special tool to remove it. The album was not good.
2016
Butterfly Keyboards Begin Destroying Themselves
The new ultra-thin keyboard mechanism was introduced. A human hair could permanently break a key. Apple denied any widespread issue for three years before launching a quiet repair program.
2017
Batterygate: Secretly Slowing Your Phone
Apple confirmed they had been throttling iPhone performance via software updates, without telling users. A $500 million settlement followed. Users got $25 each. Apple kept the rest.
2019
Mac Pro Cheese Grater: $52,000 Fully Loaded
The new Mac Pro was unveiled. A fully configured model cost $52,748. The wheels were $699. The monitor stand $999. A journalist bought a $300 PC that outperformed it in gaming benchmarks.
2020
Removes Charger. Keeps the Price.
Apple removed chargers and EarPods from iPhone boxes citing environmental reasons. The price did not decrease. Apple's packaging got smaller. Their margins got bigger. The planet remains warm.
2021–Now
AirTags Used to Stalk People Worldwide
Domestic abusers, stalkers, and car thieves immediately weaponized Apple's tracking device. Hundreds of documented cases. Apple updated the alerts. Cases continue. The devices are still sold in Apple Stores.

What Apple Says.
What Apple Does.

Apple's marketing is world-class. Their reality is a different product entirely.

🆕 Apple Says

"Privacy is a fundamental human right." — Tim Cook, every year at WWDC
"We're committed to the environment and a greener future."
"The most secure smartphone ever made."
"It just works."
"We want users to have the best experience."
"We believe in competition and choice."
"We don't read your iMessages."

🔎 Reality

Apple collects device usage, location, Siri recordings, purchase history, and app behavior. Privacy settings default to ON.
Removed chargers (smaller box = greener). Did not lower price. Ships millions of Lightning cables that became e-waste when they switched to USB-C.
FaceTime eavesdrop bug. Pegasus spyware exploits. AirTag stalking. iCloud hacks. "Secure" is relative.
Butterfly keyboards. Apple Maps. iCloud sync failures. Final Cut Pro beach balls. It just works until it doesn't.
Removes features competitors have had for years and calls it courage. Removes headphone jack. Removes charger. Removes ports. Calls it "pro."
Charges developers 30%. Blocks competing browser engines on iOS. Currently under antitrust investigation in the US and EU.
iCloud content is subject to government requests. Apple has complied with thousands of them. End-to-end encryption is opt-in and off by default.

The True Cost of
Being an Apple Person

Let's tally what a basic Apple setup actually costs. This is not the high-end. This is the minimum viable Apple life.

The "Just Getting Started" Kit

One person. One computer. One phone. The basics. Priced as of 2024.

MacBook Air 13" (M3, base model) $1,099
iPhone 16 (base model) $799
AppleCare+ for MacBook (3 yr) $249
AppleCare+ for iPhone (2 yr) $199
AirPods (because Bluetooth now requires them) $179
iCloud 200GB storage (per year, forever) $36/yr
MagSafe charger (not included) $39
USB-C to MagSafe cable (also not included) $29
USB-C hub (MacBook has 2 ports) $79
Apple Polishing Cloth (to keep it pretty) $19
💥 Year One Total $2,727+
A Windows laptop + Android phone + Google One storage = under $900.
Savings: enough to buy four sets of Apple's wheels and still have money left.

The People Have Noticed.

★☆☆☆☆
"Bought a Mac Pro for video editing. Found out I needed to spend an additional $1,700 on stand, wheels, and cables to actually use it. The wheels do not have motors. They do not connect to Wi-Fi. They spin. I cried."
— Mac Pro owner, r/apple
★☆☆☆☆
"My MacBook keyboard failed for the third time because I ate a sandwich within 12 feet of it. Apple wanted $800 to fix it. I bought a mechanical keyboard and an external monitor and now I have a very expensive webcam stand."
— Butterfly keyboard victim, Twitter/X
★★☆☆☆
"My daughter's iPhone screen cracked from a 2 foot drop onto carpet. Apple quoted me $379 to fix it. I bought a Samsung Galaxy for less than that. She now has a phone with a screen protector and a case. Revolutionary."
— Parent, Apple forum
★☆☆☆☆
"My son asked for an iPhone 'because everyone at school has one.' I bought him one. The next week he told me his friend had the new model. I am paying a $200/month mortgage for social anxiety by proxy."
— Parent, family tech forum
★★★☆☆
"I will admit the hardware is beautiful. I keep it in a case so I never see it. I pay $29/month for iCloud because my phone fills up taking photos of my cat. The cat is not worth $348/year. The cat does not care."
— Reluctant Apple user, Threads
★☆☆☆☆
"Apple Maps told me to turn left into a reservoir. I turned left. I am now typing this from a waiting room, which is dry, but my car is not. I should have used Google Maps. The fish agree."
— Maps victim, 2022

You've Read the Evidence.

At some point, "it just works" has to mean more than "it just takes your money." You have choices. Excellent ones.

Android — $0 Polishing Cloth Linux — Your Computer, Your Rules Fairphone — Actually Repairable

* These are real alternatives. We recommend researching them. We are not sponsored. We just hate $699 wheels.