【】

Three years ago, Apple agreed to shell out some paper to owners of certain older iPhones. The time to collect is coming up soon.
Per the Mercury News, settlement payments to claimants of the class-action lawsuit against Apple for its "Batterygate" controversy should start going out in the near future. The final obstacle, which came in the form of two iPhone owners objecting to the settlement, was cleared when their appeal was tossed out by the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals this week. That means it's time for Apple to pay up.
It's estimated that claimants (who had a deadline of Oct. 2020 to put their names on the list, so don't get your hopes up if you're just hearing about this now) could get as much as $65 for their troubles. If you don't recall, the source of the controversy is that Apple was accused of purposely throttling (or slowing down) older iPhones. The idea was theoretically to keep the phones from unexpectedly shutting down when their batteries still had some charge left, but in the eyes of consumers, it could also be seen as a tactic to force people to get new iPhones.
Related Stories
- How to pair Apple AirPods with an Android device
- The Apple Watch is getting a major redesign, but there's a catch
- Apple Emergency SOS on iPhone: What it is and how to use it
- Apple moved the 'end call' button in iOS 17 for some reason
- What Apple, Google, and Amazon’s websites looked like in 1999
Apple, for what it's worth, has never explicitly admitted wrongdoing here, but agreed to pay out somewhere between $310 million and $500 million anyway. And if you managed to get your name on the list before the deadline three years ago, you could have a check coming your way.
TopicsAppleiPhone
相关文章
Singapore gets world's first driverless taxis
SINGAPORE -- The world's first self-driving taxis started picking up passengers in Singapore on Thur2025-03-09Snapchat's My AI story was just a creepy glitch
Snapchat users can rest easy with the knowledge that the erratic behavior they may have recently exp2025-03-09OpenAI expands ChatGPT 'custom instructions' to free users
OpenAI's custom instructions feature that rolled out to ChatGPT Plus subscribers in July, is now ava2025-03-09Wordle today: Here's the answer and hints for July 10
Can't get enough of Wordle? Try Mashable's free version nowIt's Monday, but with a new work week com2025-03-09The Weeknd teases new music in Instagram post
The Weeknd is approaching.。 The Grammy award-winning singer looks to be in full third-studio-album m2025-03-09- The latest change to Elon Musk's X? TweetDeck — rebranded as XPro — is now a paid servic2025-03-09
最新评论