Don't just read this threads OP, READ IT ALL. There's TONS of info in here!
Disclaimer: I am making this post with the intention of educating those who misunderstand what Motorola's warranty cover's. There's a lot of discussion tossed around this forum about warranties, voiding warranties, and root voiding warranties. People always say a lot about this topic matter-of-factly but with no sources to back up their statements. I am hoping to clear the air so that everyone can understand what rooting does and does NOT do to their warranty. I am not a lawyer, this is not legal advice.
First allow me to point you to some highlights from "MOTOROLA MOBILITY INC. LIMITED GLOBAL WARRANTY MOBILE PHONES"
What Does This Limited Warranty Cover?
Motorola Mobility Inc. or its subsidiaries’ warranty obligations are limited to the terms and conditions set forth herein. Subject to the exclusions contained below, Motorola Mobility Inc or its subsidiaries (“Motorola”) warrant this Mobile Phone, and any in-box accessories which accompany such Mobile Phone (“Product”) against defects in materials and workmanship, under normal consumer use, for a period of ONE (1) YEAR from the date of retail purchase by the original end-user purchaser, or the period of time required by the laws of the country where the Product is purchased, whichever is longer (“Warranty Period”).
What this means is Motorola is offering a "Limited" warranty for 1 year and it only applies to the original owner of the phone and it only covers defects in "materials and workmanship". Which basically means if you dunk the phone in water, it's not their fault/problem.
What Will Motorola Do?
If a covered defect or damage arises and a valid warranty claim is received within the applicable Warranty Period, Motorola, at its sole option, unless otherwise required by applicable law, will either (1) repair, at no charge, the defect or damage using new, used or reconditioned/refurbished functionally equivalent replacement parts; or (2) exchange the Product with a replacement Product that is new or which has been reconditioned/refurbished or otherwise remanufactured from new or used parts and is functionally equivalent to the original Product; or (3) refund the purchase price of any Products covered by the terms and conditions of this Limited Warranty.
What this means is IF YOU HAVE A VALID CLAIM, Motorola has 3 options: Repair your phone with whatever parts they have (new, used, refurbed), give you a replacement phone (new or refurb), or give you a refund. This does NOT mean they owe you extra money, owe you a BRAND NEW PHONE, or owe you a MAXX or GNEX or any other phone of your choosing.
(a) Consumable parts, such as batteries or protective coatings designed to diminish over time unless failure has occurred due to a defect in materials or workmanship. Only batteries whose fully charged capacity falls below 80% of their rated capacity and batteries that leak are covered by this limited warranty.
(b)Cosmetic damage, including but not limited to scratches, dents, cracks or other cosmetic damage.
© Damage caused by use with non-Motorola products. Defects or damage that result from the use of non-Motorola branded or certified Products, accessories or other peripheral equipment, including without limitation housings, parts, or software, are excluded from coverage.
(d) Damage caused by accident, abuse, misuse, liquid contact, fire, earthquake or other external causes; including but not limited to: (i) improper usage or operation (e.g. operating the Product outside their permitted or intended uses as defined by Motorola, including but not limited to as set forth by Motorola in the Products' User Manual, Quick Start Guide, Online Tutorials, and other documentation), improper storage (e.g. subjecting the Product to extreme temperatures), abuse or neglect (e.g. broken/bent/missing clips/fasteners/connectors); impact damage (e.g. dropping the Product) (ii) contact with liquids, water, rain, extreme humidity, heavy perspiration or other moisture; sand, food, dirt or similar substances (except for Products sold as resistant to such substances, but only to the extent the damage was not caused by incorrectly securing the phone’s protective elements or subjecting the Product to conditions beyond its stated specifications or limits); (iii) use of the Products for commercial rental purposes; or (iv) external causes or acts which are not the fault of Motorola, including but not limited to flood, fire, earthquake, tornado or other acts of God, are excluded from coverage.
This part is should be obvious to almost everyone. Your warranty does not protect you if your phone is scratched up, you drop it, you get it wet, you intentionally bash it on your garage floor to show your friends how awesome the Gorilla glass is, or if you're in a Tsunami.
NOW THE GOOD PART:
(e) Unauthorized Service or Modification. Defects or damage resulting from service, testing, adjustment, installation, maintenance, alteration, or modification in any way, including but not limited to tampering with or altering the software, by someone other than Motorola, or its authorized service centers, are excluded from coverage. Notwithstanding the foregoing, any Product which has had its bootloader unlocked, or whose operating system has been altered, including any failed attempts to unlock the bootloader or alter such operating system, is not covered by this warranty, regardless of whether such modifications are authorized, approved, or otherwise sanctioned by Motorola.
(f) A product or part that has been modified in any manner without the written permission of Motorola. Products that have been altered in any manner so as to prevent Motorola from determining whether such Products are covered under the terms of this Limited Warranty are excluded from coverage. The forgoing shall include but not be limited to (i) serial numbers, date tags or other manufacturer coding that has been removed, altered or obliterated; (ii) mismatched or duplicated serial numbers; or (iii) broken seals or other evidence of tampering.
Do not open the Product or attempt to repair the Product yourself; such conduct may cause damage that is not covered by this warranty.
Ok, so this is the section of the warranty that everyone always likes to quote, yet never actually quotes. Motorola is saying in this section that altering your system or unlocking/trying to unlock the bootloader explicitly excludes their liability to repair your device if you damage it in the process of doing this.
This part always confuses a lot of people because it does not say altering systems or unlocking bootloaders "Voids you're warranty". It says that if you do do those things or attempt to do them and break you're phone in the process then you are not entitled to apply to Motorola for a replacement, unter the terms of this agreement. They further go on to state this:
WARNING AGAINST UNLOCKING THE BOOTLOADER OR ALTERING A PRODUCT’S OPERATING SYSTEM SOFTWARE: MOTOROLA STRONGLY RECOMMENDS AGAINST ALTERING A PRODUCT'S OPERATING SYSTEM, WHICH INCLUDES UNLOCKING THE BOOTLOADER, ROOTING A DEVICE OR RUNNING ANY OPERATING SOFTWARE OTHER THAN THE APPROVED VERSIONS ISSUED BY MOTOROLA AND ITS PARTNERS. SUCH ALTERATIONS MAY PERMANENTLY DAMAGE YOUR PRODUCT, CAUSE YOUR PRODUCT TO BE UNSAFE AND/OR CAUSE YOUR PRODUCT TO MALFUNCTION. IN SUCH CASES, NEITHER THE PRODUCT NOR ANY DAMAGE RESULTING THEREFROM WILL BE COVERED BY THIS WARRANTY.
So what does all this mean? Basically, the biggest misconception around here is people arguing over whether rooting voids your warranty. While there is no short answer I will try to explain as best as possible. Rooting your device does not "VOID YOUR WARRANTY" HOWEVER-if you do root your phone, unlock it's bootloader, alter the system or run a rom and BORK your phone in the process Motorola is not required to help you. You do, however still have a warranty.
Wha? What? What does he mean! Tucstwo, YOU ARE WRONG!!!
Let me clear the air. In 1975, the federal government passed The Magnuson–Moss Warranty Act. While this act covers a lot of other warranty related issues, the part that applies to us is this: Motorola cannot void your entire warranty because your phone has been modified by rooting/romming. However, if you're phone develops an issue (ex. bricks, won't turn on, etc) they (Motorola) have to prove that the failure was the direct result of your alteration. And then are not required to fix/replace your phone.
More specificially, let's look at law according to the Magnusson-Moss Act Chapter 50 of United States Code Section 2304 {Also attached, unabdriged}:
Waiver of standards
The performance of the duties under subsection (a) of this section shall not be required of the warrantor if he can show that the defect, malfunction, or failure of any warranted consumer product to conform with a written warranty, was caused by damage (not resulting from defect or malfunction) while in the possession of the consumer, or unreasonable use (including failure to provide reasonable and necessary maintenance). (d) Remedy without charge For purposes of this section and of section 2302© of this
title, the term "without charge" means that the warrantor may not assess the consumer for any costs the warrantor or his representatives incur in connection with the required remedy of a warranted consumer product. An obligation under subsection (a)(1)(A) of this section to remedy without charge does not necessarily require the warrantor to compensate the consumer for incidental expenses; however, if any incidental expenses are incurred because the remedy is not made within a reasonable time or
because the warrantor imposed an unreasonable duty upon the consumer as a condition of securing remedy, then the consumer shall be entitled to recover reasonable incidental expenses which are so incurred in any action against the warrantor.
So how does that mean my warranty isn't voided? If you go out and buy a brand new Razr, you root it and have no issues. No problems. Then a 6 weeks later, you plug in your headphones and all of a sudden, no sound is coming out of your head phones. Or the sound coming out of your speaker is crackling. Or your SIM/SD card door breaks off. Just because you rooted your phone, Motorola still has to honor the 1 year warranty pertaining to THOSE problems. They will STILL have to fix your headphone jack, THEY STILL have to install a new speaker and STILL have to give you a new SIM/SD card door.
A nice video posted in another thread about rooting and warranties from XDA-TV. Thanks to nailbomb3 and etrorteepe
Now, Let's Move on to newer developments: OEM Sanctioned Bootloader Unlocking
Motorola:
Motorola is offering to trade your legally afforded warranty in EXCHANGE for a bootloader unlock key. These keys are sent out via email, based on a unique token that you pull from your device. The terms of this trade are long, and boring. There is language such as:
1: You are entering into a legal agreement
2: We are not responsible for what you do with your device. You assume all risks associated with
unlocking your device and/or altering its software.3: Obtaining an unlock code voids all warranties. Once you get the unlock code, your device is no
longer covered by the Motorola warranty, or any other warranty provided with the device. NeitherMotorola, nor your wireless carrier shall have any duty to provide warranty or customer support forunlocked devices.
And, my favorite!
WARNING: MOTOROLA STRONGLY RECOMMENDS AGAINST UNLOCKING THE
BOOTLOADER AND/OR MODIFYING OR ALTERING A DEVICE'S SOFTWARE OROPERATING SYSTEM. DOING SO CAN HAVE UNINTENDED, UNFORESEEN, ANDDANGEROUS CONSEQUENCES, SUCH AS RENDERING THE DEVICE UNUSABLE,VIOLATING APPLICABLE LAWS, OR CAUSING PROPERTY DAMAGE AND/OR BODILYINJURY, INCLUDING DEATH...