It is funny that some people think that the morality issue falls only on the consumer. Like how Cricket likes to let a person insure a phone but forgets to inform them that the policy is only good for Cricket branded phones. Or how they sold a friend of mine a phone and talked them into their great new picture text service, unfortunately the phone they sold her didn't even have a camera. Or when they sold me a phone who's screen started to fail as soon as you used the text message feature, when I took it baack into the store not even a week later. They told me they nolonger carried the phone, and didn't have an alternative phone in that price leaving me with the option of buying another phone at full price plus (at the time) a $25 fee to activate it, or of course they would let me trade for a phone of lesser value (nearly $100) but I would still have to pay activation fee's. Or my personal favorite was when I bought a phone then two days later I take a girlfriend of mine to a cricket store to buy her a new phone and they offer her 500 free long distance minutes a month (again this was some time ago). when I question the salesmen about why I hadn't qualified for the same offer, he simply asks me for my phone nuraber punches it in to his computer and informes me that I now had 500 free long distance minutes a month. 6 months later I recieve a bill for over $300 in late fee's wondering how this could happen on a prepay service I was informed that when I bought my phone I was not eligeable for the 500 free long distance minutes a month and they were back charging. For the service which I could almost understand except for the fact that I had never placed a long distance call. And yes you are correct it is not the retailer job to spell out the warrenty. That doesn't make it "morale" for the retailer to exploit a loop hole in the law by pitching to their would be customers how they have thirty days in which to return the product if they are not completely satisfied. While they rush them threw the paper work, which no one ever see's there-by cheating the customer of any chance to even read the fine print out lining that the warrenty is anything other than what glib rep. had pitched to them.