If I can remotely brick the MacBook air that was stolen from me, why can't FTDI brick their stolen hardware?
Should Vishay be able to remotely brick your MacBook air if it contains a counterfeit resistor?
should you get free fluid change at Mercedes dealers if you drive up in this:

should you scream bloody murder if they _try_ to give you that free service, but fill oil pan with brake fluid due to differences between real and fake one?
As a design engineer I have no control of my supply chain of parts, this is handled by a 3rd party.
so you are not responsible for it, whats the problem?
Now if the 3rd party sources a fake chip I am screwed.
did anything change today? you could ALWAYS get screwed by a fake transistor that burns out after couple of hours
As it is out of my control the consequence is simple: no more FTDI in my designs.
no more transistors too? no more opamps, no more avrs? I suppose you stopped using pendrives and SD cards, they all get faked in china
For personal and/or lab use (we consume quite a few of these cables here, test engineers always manage to blow stuff up..) I am definitely not going to buy any FTDI anymore! I cannot spend my time researching whether a device contains a legit or a fake chip.
you dont have to, fake one simply wont work outright = no wasted time
Now I am working on a new design, but I'd like to retain a USB -> TTL serial chip with drivers available on Windows Update.
As far as I know the Prolific PL2303 does not have a driver on Windows Update, am I right? I find this chip also hard to source locally for prototypes (EU based, so I prefer Farnell).
Anyone know an alternative?
why would you need any? Farnell has original chips and there is zero risk of getting fake, where is the problem?
I simply dont get angry people from this thread - you bought a fake, deal with it. Imagine someone selling Daves uCurrent Gold, build using 5% resistors and lm358, all made to look like the genuine one, except the price is $10. This is your $2 FTDI cable with free shipping.