We, the users, are tired of being treated like consumers instead of human beings.
You invest billions into AI, ultra-high-end cameras, flashy marketing, and updates that often make things worse.
But you forget the most important thing: features that actually save lives.
Today, if someone has an accident and is near their phone, yelling “Hey Google” or “Help” won’t work.
Why? Because the voice assistant doesn’t respond when the screen is off.
That means if a person is injured, unconscious, or unable to reach the phone — it becomes a useless brick.
This is a serious design flaw. It’s dangerous. It’s irresponsible.
Where is your commitment to accessibility, safety, and basic humanity?
You promise us "technology of the future," but you ignore the essentials:
A voice-triggered emergency command that works with the screen off.
A real help function for people in need.
A phone that reacts to life-threatening situations, not just selfies and subscriptions.
Meanwhile, we’re bombarded with forced updates, phones slowed down, restricted apps, and poorly built AI no one asked for — and now you’re charging for it.
We don’t just want innovation.
We want empathy.
We want technology that works when it matters most — especially in emergencies.
This is a complaint, a warning, and a request:
Do better.
Because one day, it could be you on the ground, unable to move, crying out for help — and your phone will ignore you.