A Verizon Wireless upgrade that was supposed to fix bugs and introduce multi-screen, multi-window multitasking and new camera and image-related features to the popular Samsung Galaxy S3 instead has killed the phone’s 4G performance and dramatically decreased battery life. There are also reports some Verizon Wireless customers are finding themselves auto-enrolled in an unwanted caller ID with name add-on feature ($2.99/month) that leaves the phone connected to 3G or 4G service even when using Wi-Fi.
It was not an auspicious moment for Big Red, never fast with phone updates, particularly when Sprint customers earlier received a similar upgrade with no ill-effects.
Your editor spent two days last week attempting to mitigate Verizon’s mistakes, including several hours inside multiple Verizon Wireless store locations and talking to their national customer support center. In the end, it resulted in not one, but two factory refurbished phone exchanges and a $20 service credit for data service effectively disabled by a firmware upgrade.
This nightmare has a name: JZO54K.I535VRBMD3 — a software update so plagued with bugs, Verizon reportedly pulled it over the weekend after customers complained it ruined 4G wireless data service, along with the phone’s performance. The 128MB update has been available for about a week for those regularly checking their phones for software updates, and some customers began being prompted to install it last Friday.
So how can you tell if you are affected? Choose Settings -> About Device and check the “Build Number” visible at the bottom of the screen. If it ends in VRBMD3, you may be impacted. Not every customer is reporting problems, which may mean some phones are not affected or the performance degradation has been dismissed as a temporary reception problem or has only subtly affected low-bandwidth applications and has gone unnoticed.
Symptoms
- Your wireless data signal strength meter on the phone suddenly shows much poorer reception than before the update;
- Your battery life has declined significantly and the battery is very warm to the touch;
- You have trouble loading web pages or accessing multimedia content with long buffering pauses or sudden loss of reception in places where signals used to be adequate;
- Messaging services seem unstable with frequent disconnects;
- Your phone drops from 4G to 3G service and stays connected at 3G (or less) speeds until you reset the phone;
- Using “Speed Test” apps result in “Network Communication Issue” errors or extremely long test times with very high ping rates, very slow/inconsistent download speeds, and trouble measuring upload speeds;
- You find icons for both Wi-Fi and 3G or 4G wireless service at the top of your phone at the same time;
- You suddenly find your account billed for Caller ID plus Name service at $2.99 a month, despite not requesting this service.
The more of these symptoms you experience, the greater the chance Verizon’s update for the S3 has temporarily left your phone a shadow of its former self.
Verizon officially recognized the wireless connectivity problem May 31 when it released an internal bulletin acknowledging the software update is responsible. The company claims it has since stopped sending it out to S3 owners (we have not been able to confirm this ourselves).
Verizon blames Samsung for the defective update. Samsung blames Verizon, telling customers software upgrades are vetted, approved, and distributed exclusively by Verizon. Customers are left over a barrel until one or both companies assume responsibility and issue corrected firmware, which could take weeks.
Verizon Wireless’ technical support told Stop the Cap! the phone’s firmware is at the heart of the problem, and although it can sometimes get phones to be more tolerant of the software update, no number of factory resets, SIM card refreshes or replacements, or settings changes will fully correct the problem. Many customers can expect continued degraded 4G performance comparable to 3G speeds (or much worse) either because of slowed performance or an unstable connection until a fix is available.
The problem with multiple icons for both Wi-Fi and 3G or 4G service has to do with a single new app Verizon has forced on their customers. “Caller ID plus Name” was added to your app list in the latest update and is responsible for the dual data connections and reported instances of customers being auto-enrolled and billed for the service, even if they never specifically ran the app.
Bloatware is bad enough, but badly performing forced apps are worse. You can permanently disable the offending app and solve the double icon problem with this simple fix:
Enter Settings -> Application Manager, and select the “All” applications tab along the top. Find “Caller ID plus Name” in the list, select it, and you will see a button to “disable” the app. This may not resolve the problem of the app auto-enrolling you for a paid feature that costs $2.99 a month, so watch your bill.
Affected customers with degraded service have several options:
- If your phone is still under warranty, and most Galaxy S3 phones are, you can request a free handset replacement. Since Verizon created the problem, ask for a free shipping upgrade to overnight FedEx delivery. Your refurbished phone will arrive without a battery, SIM card, or back cover. Use the ones included with your original phone and your replacement handset should automatically activate. Immediately after powering up, your phone will offer a series of two or three Verizon firmware updates that you can defer. Until it can be verified Verizon has stopped pushing the defective update to customers, we recommend you avoid performing these firmware updates. If you don’t, and Verizon pushes the defective update to your replacement phone, it will likely perform no better than your original;
- Request service credit for degraded/lost data service. Remember to also request credit, if applicable, for any Mobile Hotspot option, GPS travel, or other Verizon add-on that depends on a stable data network connection;
- Indicate your displeasure that Verizon did not more thoroughly test the update before pushing it on customers.
Here are the suggested fixes Verizon may attempt on your phone, but we do not believe they correct the underlying problem — only updated software will:
- Removing the battery and “Refreshing/replacing the SIM card” may help refresh roaming rules or possibly correct a corrupted SIM card. Some customers reported this helped them get back data service they completely lost after the update, so it might help in certain cases, but probably will not correct the unstable 4G connection;
- Clearing the cache and cookies from the web browser is unlikely to have any effect on this problem;
- Changing the Mobile Networks setting to/from “Global” to “LTE/CDMA.” A few customers reported they got back some data service after toggling these options. The default on the Samsung Galaxy S3 running firmware from last fall was (and still remains) Global. We suspect the switch toggles the radio off and on, forcing a reconnect, which can bring back a 4G connection after the phone downshifts to 3G. But we don’t believe this will correct the speed/stability problem;
- A “factory reset” is frankly a waste of time. This will leave your phone with the same defective firmware. If you had symptoms before, you will likely still have them after resetting your phone.
If you are reluctant to part with your phone and avail yourself of any option other than requesting a service credit while Samsung and Verizon point fingers over who is responsible and and when a fix will arrive, you can make life with your phone a bit easier with these tips:
- Stay on Wi-Fi when possible. Wi-Fi data performance was not affected by this software update;
- Expect 30-40% reduced battery life. We suspect this (and the hot battery) is caused by the phone trying to deal with unstable 4G service, as if it was in a fringe reception zone. Keep a charger handy;
- Try and get your phone to downshift to 3G by finding a weak reception spot (like a basement) and hope the phone drops (and remains) on 3G until it is rebooted. It appears 3G data speeds are not affected by the software bug;
- Expect problems when using high bandwidth applications on Verizon’s LTE 4G service. We found video next to impossible to view on 4G, but audio streaming did seem to perform at lower bit rates.
Expect web browsing on 4G to be problematic on complex web pages, which may load incompletely. Try and do your browsing on mobile versions of websites or wait until you can find Wi-Fi.
I’ve keep keeping a look out for S3 users who have applied this update on Verizon Wireless to do folks the big favor. Honestly, a lot of this should be solved via the app itself. Upon opening the app, you’ll be greeted with a menu which always appears. If you select Account settings and view the account status, it allows you to either accept an agreement (not enrolled) or cancel the account/trial. This should stop the Caller ID service on the bill right away. Once done, within the Account Settings there is a Remove Application button. If you press this,… Read more »
I just got off the phone with Verizon and they acknowledged the huge problem. Checking with Samsung they said the new update should be available in a few days. If my phone is not operating normal in a few days to call back and they would send me a new phone. Kudoos to Verizon for admitting the glitch and offering to send a new phone if not fixed. This was the 2nd phone call I made the first one I was 4 days ago and I don’t think they were aware of the severity of the problems caused by the… Read more »
Same issue with new update on Samsung S3 – battery lilfe sucks and very little ability to get 4g – almost no service in Florida area. Verizon agrees there is an issue but no offer to get new phone which I would take. Also all MMS text photos come in as video – this sucks royal! Wish Motorola had a new phone that is lighter like the Samsung as I would never buy a Samsung again!
I started having the same symptoms you are describing, and talking to Verizon tech support just wanted me to do a hard reset and wipe my data. I refused and ended up going to the local store. They knew of the problem right away and replaced my SIM card. Problem solved!
The SIM card change may help restore some connectivity, but it does not resolve the degraded 4G performance. Run some speed tests. If you are in the 1-3Mbps range with a very slow performing test (often failing on the upload test), that also shows periods where the test seems to stop, you are still affected by the bad firmware.
Unless you are in a congested or poor signal area, you should see at least 9-10Mbps from Verizon’s LTE network. Under the latest firmware, that stopped happening and the phone more closely resembles a 3G phone.
I’m fed up with this update. I’ve had every problem listed here ever since I updated…and I regret updating! I just got off the phone with Verizon and he said it was samsung’s fault because of the firmware. Whatever, enough with the blame games. He said an update is coming tentatively in JULY. Are you kidding me…. I complained about my lack of data and would like a credit. The gentleman was nice enough to give me 11 days worth of data back….so I pay 30/ month..which ended with it being $11 back this month. Worth a shot to ask… Read more »
Verizon may have said it quit sending out the update, but the two phones in my family got it June 8.
I just spoke to an employee at a local Verizon authorized partner, and he indicated that the only way to really fix the phone is to replace it. He claimed that using Odin doesn’t fix everything that this update broke, even if you go back to the software it came with a year ago. He also indicated that in our area, he claims that 1000+ customers in this area have been effected. That explains why the stores no longer have any CPO phones and they have to order one for me. I’m not an Apple fan-boy, but actions like this… Read more »
I can’t imagine a firmware update could not correct this, but you are right you need a replacement for now because who knows exactly when that update will be forthcoming.
I have been deferring the firmware updates that keep popping up on my “recertified” replacement phone.
I just spoke to Verizon and they told me a fix is being issued on June 19th at Midnight.
NEW FIRMWARE UPDATE for Verizon Samsung Galaxy S3 STILL HAS CALLER ID APP! About bi-montly I check to see if there have been any updates for my VERIZON Samsung Galaxy S3. Yesterday I went into setting, about phone software updates and I checked. There was an update. So, I downloaded it while connected to WIFI. This morning I had an email from Verizon wireless confirming a new feature being added. But, I didn’t add a feature. So I called tech support. They immeidately told me about the caller ID app. The TECH invalidated the auto enrollment. Next I Googled and… Read more »
Hi,
The new Call ID Name APP for mobile devices is listed under the change features for your phone number on the verizon wireless page. It clearly shows a $2.99 montly charge. Also, since I disabled this offending caller id app on my Galaxy S3 the app no long shows up on the list of all applications.
Hopefully it can be permanently removed by customers although Verizon does enjoy their forced bloatware that customers are not allowed to strip off their phones. Make sure you receive a full credit for the Caller ID charges from Verizon. I never ran the app personally. I am seeing some ongoing conflicting reports that the latest update supposed to correct the crippling problems in the last update does seem to work well for crippled phones, but not so well for the refurb replacement phones never subjected to the original bad firmware. For now, I am deferring all firmware updates on my… Read more »
I ran the 2nd update and my phone still drains battery and gets really hot.
Total disappointment.
I just installed the update on June 24. The build number ends in I535VRBMF1. My only problem so far seems to be that when i am home, it doesn’t auto-detect my wi-fi the way that it did before the upgrade. If I disable mobile data, i can pick it up but then I have to remember to enable it when I’m away from home. Has anyone experienced this and have a solution?
I feel your pain FMS: my upgrade arrived June 24th and the build is the same number as yours. My phone no longer auto-detects either my home w-fi or my firm wi-fi. I can turn it off/on and force the detection, but within moments the phone reverts to 4G. I just started researching the problem today & found this forum. I haven’t tried calling Verizon or Samsung yet – so no solution yet.
I got the cure FMS: the build brought in an ap “Caller Name ID” and gave us an automatic “Trial Subscription”. The ap did not show up in my application manager, but I was able to simply stop the “free trial” from opening the ap itself and that gets rid of the simultaneous wi-fi/4G notifications as well as my automatic wi-fi detection.
which ones battery stays for long time samsung s3 19300 or 19305??
Why is Verizon the only ones mentioned here, boostmobile is just as bad. I unfortunately have a galaxy s3 and boostmobile can care less about their customers as well. I have sent my phone back to Samsung 5 times, and on the 5th time they sent me anew phone back, but boostmobile could have cared less cause they didn’t want to try and do anything for me at all. I only see 4G when I LOOK at my phone, but when I attempt to use my phone it goes to 3G or no G’s at all. I made boostmobile aware… Read more »