Corsair fights back against RAM scammers and thieves with packaging shift — ditches iconic yellow boxes for transparent plastic and anti-tampering labels
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If you’ve purchased one of the best RAM kits on the market, specifically a Corsair Vengeance DDR5 memory kit, and noticed the packaging looks dramatically different, there's no need to panic. Corsair has recently revamped the packaging across its Vengeance DDR5 lineup, adopting a new approach to combat retail scams and theft.
Starting in early January this year, Corsair changed the packaging for the Vengeance DDR5 series, including the standard non-RGB, the flashy RGB, and the budget-oriented RS variants. Instead of the traditional yellow cardboard box, Vengeance DDR5 memory modules now arrive in a sealed plastic clamshell made from recycled plastic. For added security, Corsair has placed a tamper-evident bellow label on the clamshell. The security seal wraps around the clamshell and tears when you open it, preventing thieves from opening and resealing it.
The packaging change is limited to the Vengeance two-module configurations. Therefore, memory kits with four modules and other SKUs may continue to use the old packaging. Nonetheless, Corsair added a security label to the cardboard boxes to increase protection.
Article continues belowThe primary reason for using a see-through packaging is to allow consumers to visually verify what they're purchasing before opening the product. Furthermore, the recycled plastic material appears to provide ESD protection, as memory is highly sensitive and a small body discharge can damage it.
In addition to benefiting consumers, the redesigned packaging will help retailers detect fraud. It's common nowadays for criminals to pull the old return scam, where they buy legitimate DDR5 memory, slip in the modules of other types, like DDR4 or old DDR2, or dummy modules, and return them to the retailer. It will also prevent thieves from stealing the memory outright and leaving the empty box to continue its way to the consumer.
Hardware theft has long been a problem. But memory theft has proliferated recently as the AI crunch and memory shortage have driven computer memory prices through the roof. Unlike other components that are big or heavy, memory is lightweight and small, making it easy to steal. We've gotten to a point where shoplifters are stealing memory from display systems.
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Zhiye Liu is a news editor, memory reviewer, and SSD tester at Tom’s Hardware. Although he loves everything that’s hardware, he has a soft spot for CPUs, GPUs, and RAM.
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metroarea4 Memory shortage? 😡Reply
More like memory theft. Corporate greed and a race to gobble up every resource necessary to try and be the first at achieving AGI. Willfully using their financial advantages and ability to bilk tax payers in the vicinity of their massive AI data centers. This in the form of the massive subsidies these companies bargain (strong arm) with in what they call “incentives” for the area. These are really just tax cuts for them. This ends up creating sharp increases in utility rates and eventually higher taxes for residents. Culminating in everyone being priced up and sometimes out of these resources or worse. The ability to afford living in that area. Yet again being priced out.
This creates another dangerous parallel to something known as a growth Ponzi scheme that many municipalities are already facing..
This really needs to stop. I’m glad that people are catching on as people and municipalities are uniting in efforts to say no to these financial behemoths that are really just greedy bullies. Chandler and Tucson AZ, Caledonia, WI, and Prince George’s County MD. Perpetually being locked into a life as a subscription model. Another financial trap similar to credit where the only real benefactors are the ones building this system. Everyone else loses.
Sorry for the rant but all of this really hits a nerve as a computer building, loving nerd that disagrees with this shift towards own nothing, forever fees, lease/rent apps, storage, computers and now processing power. Consumers are losing on all fronts IMO. -
Geef Replymetroarea4 said:More like memory theft.
Think of it like this: You own a sandwich business that is able to sell all the sandwiches you make.
A rich guy comes along and says "Hey, let me buy 40% of all your sandwiches for the next 10 years. I'll pay more per sandwich than they are worth separate."
This will mean less sandwiches for everyone else but more money for you overall.
Everyone else is willing to pay more for whatever sandwiches are left and again, more money for you.
Tough choice... 🤔 -
Shiznizzle Reply
I do not think you are wrong.metroarea4 said:Memory shortage? 😡
More like memory theft. Corporate greed and a race to gobble up every resource necessary to try and be the first at achieving AGI. Willfully using their financial advantages and ability to bilk tax payers in the vicinity of their massive AI data centers. This in the form of the massive subsidies these companies bargain (strong arm) with in what they call “incentives” for the area. These are really just tax cuts for them. This ends up creating sharp increases in utility rates and eventually higher taxes for residents. Culminating in everyone being priced up and sometimes out of these resources or worse. The ability to afford living in that area. Yet again being priced out.
This creates another dangerous parallel to something known as a growth Ponzi scheme that many municipalities are already facing..
This really needs to stop. I’m glad that people are catching on as people and municipalities are uniting in efforts to say no to these financial behemoths that are really just greedy bullies. Chandler and Tucson AZ, Caledonia, WI, and Prince George’s County MD. Perpetually being locked into a life as a subscription model. Another financial trap similar to credit where the only real benefactors are the ones building this system. Everyone else loses.
Sorry for the rant but all of this really hits a nerve as a computer building, loving nerd that disagrees with this shift towards own nothing, forever fees, lease/rent apps, storage, computers and now processing power. Consumers are losing on all fronts IMO.
Trillion dollar corps go cap in hand to governments around the world begging for subsidies and tax cuts as well as the ability to build data centers. All the while claiming that the communities will benefit, which is a lie.
I am done buying tech till this madness ends now. On AM5 now by a hair since i bought the DDR5 in early Nov. Also have a Am4 backup. Used AM4 for nearly 8 years so 8 years from today is when i can buy new hardware. -
MooreBreaker LOL. Everyone luv Free Market Capitalism until they realise they ain't got enough Capital..Reply
LOL.. get rich or die trying, what can I say..
Stop expecting to get everything you want in life at a price you can afford.
Then maybe you won't have to go to war with a certain Asian superpower with the power of boomerang tariffs and scary language -
magbarn Reply
Would you let a single country purchase 40% of the world's oil supply? Ai companies shouldn't be able to do the same thing. Wars have been fought over less oil than 40%.MooreBreaker said:LOL. Everyone luv Free Market Capitalism until they realise they ain't got enough Capital..
LOL.. get rich or die trying, what can I say..
Stop expecting to get everything you want in life at a price you can afford.
Then maybe you won't have to go to war with a certain Asian superpower with the power of boomerang tariffs and scary language -
TheyStoppedit Replymagbarn said:Would you let a single country purchase 40% of the world's oil supply? Ai companies shouldn't be able to do the same thing. Wars have been fought over less oil than 40%.
I'm not liking the Memory/GPU shortage any more than you do, but you can't tell someone who they can sell to and who they can't. If I have a product, and you are willing to pay X dollars for my product or bulk amounts of my product, it is up to I and I alone to decide if I want to sell it to you. If someone is willing to pay X dollars for a product, and someone is willing to sell said product for X dollars, there should be nothing stopping that transaction, assuming the product itself is legal. I have a bag of jelly beans that I paid $3.00 for. I post it on ebay for $5B. Is someone going to pay that? Not likely..... but if someone comes along who is willing to pay $5B for my bag of jelly beans, that is up to them, and no one has any business interfering. A customer and a business providing mutual consent to the sale of a product for a mutually agreed price is perfectly legal, and that's how it should be. -
Scotty Dilson Reply
This is why it's a bubble. GPU manufacturers are already optimising their drivers to work with lower RAM. Desktop and mobile software will follow. Intel were already slightly ahead of the game for example, but technical solutions to working with less RAM will emerge.TheyStoppedit said:I'm not liking the Memory/GPU shortage any more than you do, but you can't tell someone who they can sell to and who they can't. If I have a product, and you are willing to pay X dollars for my product or bulk amounts of my product, it is up to I and I alone to decide if I want to sell it to you. If someone is willing to pay X dollars for a product, and someone is willing to sell said product for X dollars, there should be nothing stopping that transaction, assuming the product itself is legal. I have a bag of jelly beans that I paid $3.00 for. I post it on ebay for $5B. Is someone going to pay that? Not likely..... but if someone comes along who is willing to pay $5B for my bag of jelly beans, that is up to them, and no one has any business interfering. A customer and a business providing mutual consent to the sale of a product for a mutually agreed price is perfectly legal, and that's how it should be.
When AI reaches maturity, or collapses, the RAM manufacturers will NEED consumers, and be asking "Hey, do you want 256GB RAM sticks, datacentre grade, for $1000 apiece?" and they won't have a market.
You are basically right, but if they cut off a reliable customer base and expect it to be the same when they need to sell outside of AI growth, they'll be in for a shock. This happens time and time again with industry. Fail to keep the customer satisfied and die. -
LordVile Reply
Assuming you can get those GPUs as they’re moving production to data centre SKUs.Scotty Dilson said:This is why it's a bubble. GPU manufacturers are already optimising their drivers to work with lower RAM. Desktop and mobile software will follow. Intel were already slightly ahead of the game for example, but technical solutions to working with less RAM will emerge.
When AI reaches maturity, or collapses, the RAM manufacturers will NEED consumers, and be asking "Hey, do you want 256GB RAM sticks, datacentre grade, for $1000 apiece?" and they won't have a market.
You are basically right, but if they cut off a reliable customer base and expect it to be the same when they need to sell outside of AI growth, they'll be in for a shock. This happens time and time again with industry. Fail to keep the customer satisfied and die.