

Spotting a fake microSD card after purchase When I was searching for dashcams I found examples of fake cards on the very first search page. Don’t think that just because a card is listed on the first page of a web retailer’s search results it is not a fake.Check that the company named on the card actually makes cards in the capacity offered by visiting their web site and looking at the products listed.The red/black and red/gold branding of market leader SanDisk is often copied. Fake cards often use the same color schemes as leading brands. If the brand is one you’ve heard of, check out how it is represented by going to its web site and compare its own images of cards with the image of the card you are looking at. If the brand isn’t one you’ve heard of, look it up to find out if it is real, and do some digging online to check its reputation. Check the company branding and how colors are used on the card.These marks and their meanings are at the web sites of those two organizations.

Other marks belong to the SD Association.

For example the SD logo itself, which is trademarked and belongs to SD-3C LLC, the company that licenses and enforces intellectual property rights for SD memory cards and ancillary products. There are a lot of marks on a microSD card, and they are all present for specific reasons. To avoid the need to find out whether a card is fake or real, the best advice is to buy from a reputable seller that’s a specialist in the field you are interested in, such as, for example, a camera related web site, or to buy direct from a reputable card brand.īut if you want to buy from a ‘boxshifter’ or generalist web seller, there are some key ways you can spot a fake microSD card by just looking at a picture of it. So, how do you spot a fake SD card when buying online, either as a standalone card or as part of a bundle with other hardware? And if you’ve bought a microSD card and you suspect it is fake how do you test it and what do you do next? Spotting a fake microSD card online Deviation from these standards markings, as well as anomalies of colour or corporate branding, can alert people to fake cards. But the fact is, there are standards set for these markings which apply across the industry, and which are designed to provide certainty on the specification of any one card, and to help purchasers compare cards from different makers. This is because of the range of different markings that a card carries, whose meaning might not be immediately obvious to everyone. For the average person, telling the fake from the real just by looking at a picture of a card on a web site is challenging.
