Not sure what you mean. Obviously USB-C is a fragile connector no matter how much materials you wrap around it. A slight vertical push on a plugged connector is all that us needed to bend and crack the mating part.
I agree, and I dread when the USB-C connector on my phone or laptop fails. The Framework laptop allows the user to replace the USB-C module. My own laptop has *two* USB-C ports and both support bidirectional power, but later models only have one, of course.
Bunch of busy-bodies with nothing better to do.
Why can't they just let the market decide how things are made? I smell a billionaire-wanna-be in the making here. Somebody is trying to reap some money. I don't know who, but somebody!
Separate adapters and charging systems do produce more waste, but so do batteries. I would have preferred that they charge a Pigouvian tax based on the negative externalities of disposing of the extra waste, including batteries, but I suspect this was not politically feasible.
Ah yes, the good old times in which every phone maker and model had a different barrel plug and/or data connector with proprietary protocol for data transfert.
The USB-C PD protocol supports cryptographic authentication so manufacturers are still free to tie their products to their chargers. It was part of the standard from the very start. I predict nothing will change, only now the chargers will look like they should be compatible when they are not.
With that said, my Samsung phone is incredibly picky about which USB-C chargers support "fast charging". It even pops up a message taunting me when an "unauthorized" charger is connected.