Ask Different Asked by brewpixels on October 30, 2021
I recently bought a MacBook Pro from a third party brand new in the box. I go to set it up and I get to a screen that says "Remote Management"
It says Verizon can remotely install apps and erase my MacBook Pro… WTF?
Why am I seeing this message? Does this mean the MacBook is not new?
Apple has device enrollment so you can get this with a brand new - out of the box Mac or iPhone or iPad. It could be a simple mistake where the person selling a Mac accidentally listed your serial number instead of the correct one, or they pulled the wrong mac from stock for you. It could also be deliberate bait and switch or worse.
Actual mistakes where Apple or their agents mess up serials and DEP is super rare, and most of the time, this indicates a company purchased this through educational / enterprise / business team and your seller is the one that messed up intentionally or unintentionally.
I would get them to retrieve the original purchase and contact Apple to validate the serial number and double check they didn’t accidentally register your new Mac to the wrong account.
Since this is third party - have them release the DEP lock in less than a week or return it. You can’t escape this and without the original invoice - not your third party invoice, Apple will decline to unlock that Mac and release it in my experience. You might also consult a local lawyer to learn what your obligations are with respect to suspected stolen goods, you may have purchased an experience here and not a product you can use.
Answered by bmike on October 30, 2021
Very large organizations like Verizon likely have their devices enrolled from the factory, it could be new but it's likely stolen, innocently mixed up as a retail product for sale or liquidated to a 3rd party as "new old stock" (unlikely IMO). However, generally speaking, when you see this screen, it's usually not “brand new in the box” as you describe. The fact that it had MDM installed/enabled (manual process) means at a minimum, it was configured for use. The moment that happens, it’s no longer "new" but "used" (pre-owned) or at the very least it's considered "Open Box."
The problem here is that you could have something that is legitimately sold from Verizon to the third party via liquidation and the MDM was innocently overlooked to it being a stolen device in which case, if you are in possession of it, you could have it confiscated by authorities without compensation back to you.
In this particular case, Verizon being a large company with a large bureaucracy, it will be a Herculean effort to validate its legitimacy and to get MDM removed. I would return this to the person you purchased this from for a full refund as it’s not as described - brand new. Let the vendor deal with removing the MDM - this is the "value add" he's supposed to provide.
This is not to say that buying from 3rd parties is to be discouraged; you just have to be more diligent. Here are some tips for dealing with 3rd parties:
Use a service that offers purchase protection like PayPal or eBay
Test it out; boot it up and test before closing the deal. If you run into this type of error, walk away.
Boot it from a completely off state. If the machine is running and “waiting” for you, it could be a sign of trying to obfuscate issues. Shut it down completely and boot from off. For instance, they may have booted into Safe Mode, obscuring any issue that might occur during a normal boot
Test everything while on battery.
xev
but it requires XQuartz to be installed (both are free)Check the battery stats. You can do this from Terminal without extra software. Issue the command:
$ system_profiler SPPowerDataType | grep -i "charge information" -A 10
See the link for sample output. If it's brand new it won't have a bunch of cycles (should be in the single digits) and the "max charge" and "charge remaining" shouldn't have much of a delta if the battery's fully charged.
(I can't stress this enough) If this is an in-person transaction, do this at a police station. Some even offer a well lit, camera monitored space in the the front parking lot to do the exchange. If your seller balks at this, you'll know something's not right and should walk from the deal.
Most of all, live by the philosophy caveat emptor or buyer beware. If a deal seems too good to be true, it probably is. If you not "strong" in tech, do what you'd do if buying a used car from a 3rd party - bring along a tech to give you the thumbs up/down on the purchase.
Answered by Allan on October 30, 2021
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