Opinion: Samsung needs to act fast on this Galaxy S22 Ultra factory reset lockout issue
Samsung has a mess on its hands that doesnβt look good for a company trying to convince people its software support promises actually mean something. We are talking about the factory reset lockout issue that the users of Galaxy S22 Ultra are facing.
Some Galaxy S22 Ultra owners are discovering that after a factory reset, their phones are behaving like company-issued enterprise devices, locked behind organizational management controls that prevent them from logging into their own accounts.
This isnβt a minor annoyance like a stuttering animation or a bloated update file. Your phone decides youβre not authorized to use it after a reset. The device becomes an expensive paperweight, and the user has done nothing wrong to deserve it.
What makes this particularly strange is the enterprise angle.
People reporting this issue are saying they bought these phones straight from retailers like Best Buy, brand new, years ago. No corporate IT department, no company policy; just a regular person trying to reset their personal phone.
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The first reports of the Galaxy S22 Ultra reset lockout issue surfaced nine months ago. That is a problem that has been sitting in the open, quietly collecting victims, while the company apparently treated it as something less than urgent.
The issue doesnβt seem widespread based on current Reddit threads. Whatβs the point of four years of updates if a factory reset can strand you outside your own phone?
Samsung hasnβt said a word publicly.
Samsung needs to do two things quickly.
- First, acknowledge the problem publicly.
- Second, provide a clear workaround or fix.
If youβre dealing with this right now, reaching out directly to Samsung support is your best shot. Thereβs no known self-service fix, and attempting more resets wonβt help.
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