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How to turn off Headphone Safety on iPhone

Hi, does anybody know how to turn the headphone safety setting off on the new iso update???


cheers.


[Re-Titled by Moderator]

iPhone 11, iOS 14

Posted on Nov 10, 2020 12:41 AM

Reply
Question marked as Top-ranking reply

Posted on Dec 3, 2020 9:54 AM

Some of us have been handed a nasty surprise from Apple after recently updating to IOS 14.2. Prior to iOS 14.2 our phones had a feature called headphone safety which notified us that the volume of our headphones was too high and lowered it back down autonomously. This feature was mandated for EU states but it was optional for everywhere else, essentially if you lived outside of Europe, you were able to turn this feature off.

Once you update your phone to iOS 14.2 there is no longer an option to disable this headphone safety feature, whether you live in the EU or outside of Europe (I live in Canada). Okay, so what’s the big deal? Well, first thing, ethically speaking, medical concerns such as hearing loss, which this feature is trying to prevent, are essentially a personal choice, which should not have any interference with a Tech company.

More importantly, the feature has been designed terribly. It cannot differentiate between Bluetooth headsets, Bluetooth speakers, and Bluetooth receivers for your car radio. We typically listen to music quite loud on Bluetooth speakers, since they are typically further away from us, however since the phone cannot differentiate between a Bluetooth speaker and Bluetooth headphones, it assumes your listening to headphones too loud and lowers the volume for you to 50%. If you higher the volume manually it will continue to lower it every 20-30 minutes. This experience becomes dangerous when driving as it forces you to either pull over or reach for your phone and fiddle with the buttons while driving, which can have dangerous consequences.

We have tried reaching out to apple, and we were met with disappointing results. The recommended help was to submit your feedback to apples feedback page: https://www.apple.com/feedback/ Upon accessing the feedback page, there isn’t even an option to report any feedback for iOS 14.2 bugs/ features.

Shockingly, posts submitted to the apple community boards/forums kept being deleted, and I was personally threatened to have my apple ID deleted and ISP blocked if I continued to raise awareness in regards to this issue. This is truly a first for Apple, in 13 years that I’ve been a customer, I never thought I would get threatened this way. So one must assume there is no help coming, no consideration, no willingness to engage in discourse by Apple in regards to this with the impacted users.

Apples mythological existence was largely propelled by the introduction of the iPod, a device that made it easy for us to enjoy music, how we wanted, where we wanted. Today, amongst so many limitations due to the global pandemic, all we really ask is to please, let us enjoy our music uninterrupted, un-convoluted, we need this right now, for some of us, music is the only thing we have left to keep us afloat.

Please allow those who are not within the EU the ability to turn this feature off; we are all conscientious adults able to manage our hearing.

This is not a smear campaign against Apple, we just want to be heard, much like we just want to hear our music.


[Edited by Moderator]

1,120 replies

Dec 3, 2020 9:34 PM in response to quattpequatt

The odd thing is, the EU has had that standard for many years, and accordingly the EU-iPhones have had an implementation of headphone safety since... probably the first iPhone, I don't remember. But that implementation was far less intrusive than what appeared now in 14.2 - it would not happen automatically while listening, and it would not lower the volume on its own. Rather, there would be a warning if the user increased the volume above a certain level (i.e. a popup while the user was actively pressing the volume-up button), and indeed it would only happen with long intervals (many days for me). So I really don't understand why suddenly this new method should be necessary - the regulations have not changed.

Dec 4, 2020 4:04 AM in response to phattrance

I agree with phattrance, this “feature” has made my iphone next to useless. Constantly having to walk into a different room to turn the volume back up, every few minutes, is too infuriating for me.


And to all the people talking about regulations: stop being such apologists. There’s no regulation anywhere that limits the volume below 100% for input to a hifi system, which is what we’re talking about. This is purely and simply about Apple trying to stop people using the headphone jack, because they want you to pay for a separate interface device, or even just a lead, to which they own the copyright.


For me also, I can’t trust Apple any more. I bought a device with a headphone jack. I do not expect the company to later issue updates that cripple that device and effectively stop you using the headphone jack. If they can do that, what’s next? Will they turn the power port off to force you to use only wireless charging? Will they delete all songs imported from CD? Will they kill your battery dead even if it’s capable of fully charging, to force you to upgrade? A company that can make it nearly impossible to listen to music like this is capable of anything.

Dec 4, 2020 4:13 AM in response to UsernamePlus

To be honest, I doubt this is about the headphone jack. Sure, the headphone jack is affected, but if you (like me) are one to use wired headphones once in a while, you do have the workaround of inserting them with a Lightning adapter and lie to the iPhone that it is an "other device" you just inserted, not headphones - then there is no volume monitoring.


With Bluetooth devices on the other hand there is no such workaround. Hence I am most severely affected when I am using my low-powered Bluetooth earphones for exercising, because I need to turn them up quite a bit to get "normal" volume.

Dec 4, 2020 7:47 AM in response to Scream106gti

The regulations are world wide, apple only chose to adhere to them this year.


Israel also follows the same regulations, it appears to be a new internationally standard for all phones.


All phones will be have this feature forced upon them once they perform a system restore at any point in time after having updated to 14.2 regardless of what iPhone it is.


i can’t blame apple for following regulations, it’s out of their control, the government establishes these measures, not apple.


however we should hold apple accountable for the implementation of this feature, we should voice that the feature needs to be reworked in a different way which isn’t as intrusive, which doesn’t remind you ever 20 minutes.


Also, we should see about putting this in parental controls, as most of us adults already have sustained hearing damage thus far, this feature is a little too late.


[Edited by Moderator]

Dec 4, 2020 9:10 AM in response to Peter Di Arcangelo

Well yes. It should obviously be Less Intrusive. But, it also needs to be more intelligent.


It needs to factor in the actual Bluetooth Device type (significantly more correctly as they are again getting MANY of them wrong). (this one I don't know for sure how the get to 100% without allowing the end user some flexibility do over ride or provide the device type...there are simply a very large number of devices on the market and they have forced us to use them with the removal of the aux port...which I guess would have had its own issues with this feature and device type detection).


It needs to factor in the actual recording level of the sound file involved. Just because my headphones say they can go to 91db or maybe even more does not mean that all sound files produce that level of volume when plays on these headphones. (this one it seems they should be able to achieve with their machine learning concepts).

Dec 5, 2020 6:17 PM in response to debraelizabeth

Indeed, the regulation they are following is UL 62368-1.


i understand they must follow it, so I don’t believe there is any chance at being able to turn this off ever again, however... they need to figure out if it’s possible to implement a solution which is smarter and less intrusive that still fulfil regulatory criteria... this solution they made isn’t very good in application, specially given it can’t differentiate between headphones and speakers and car audio systems.

How to turn off Headphone Safety on iPhone

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