Yet earlier LED products did not have the overheating issue at all and some are made properly and don't create so much inefficient waste heat.
Warning on the label? Yeah, right, whatever. So everyone was already aware of this issue of early failure in common usage, and we aren't being told these can replace incandescents?
Why is the "warning" in such very tiny print if they aren't trying to hide something this important? Surely important enough to be called out in large print on the front of the package so people can select what they need?
Or could it be that we have a dramatically cheapened product on our hands, not fit for purpose. One that should offer an extended life but instead sees failure much sooner than the estimate provided prominently on most packaging? One that consumes more electricity than required to produce a given amount of light?
It seems pretty anti-consumer to me. "Let them eat cake" is a pretty poor attitude.