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Apple last year agreed to pay $35 million to settle a U.S. class action lawsuit alleging that the iPhone 7 and iPhone 7 Plus were prone to audio issues due to a defective chip in the devices, and it has now started notifying eligible customers by email.

iPhone-7-Plus-Jet-Black.jpg

You may be eligible for a payment from Apple if you are a U.S. resident who owned an iPhone 7 or iPhone 7 Plus between September 16, 2016 and January 3, 2023, and reported audio issues covered by the settlement to Apple, and/or paid Apple out of pocket to have your iPhone repaired or replaced as a result of the covered audio issues.

Those who did not receive a notice, but believe they are eligible to submit a claim, are instructed to email info@smartphoneaudiosettlement.com.

The deadline to select a payment method, object to the settlement, or opt out is June 3, with more details available on the settlement notice website. Those who paid Apple out of pocket could receive up to $349, while others could get up to $125, according to the proposed settlement, which requires approval by a California court on July 18.

Apple was sued over the issue in multiple U.S. states in 2019, with the complaints alleging that the company violated consumer protection laws and breached warranties. Despite agreeing to a settlement, Apple has denied any wrongdoing, and the court hearing the class action has not ruled in favor of Apple or the plaintiffs.

"Loop Disease"

In an internal document, obtained by MacRumors in May 2018, Apple acknowledged a microphone issue affecting some iPhone 7 and iPhone 7 Plus models:
Some customers might report that after they've updated to iOS 11.3, the microphone on their iPhone 7 or iPhone 7 Plus doesn't work and the speaker button is grayed out when they make or receive a call.

Symptoms:
- The speaker button is grayed out during calls
- Other people are unable to hear the customer on cellular or FaceTime calls
- If a customer plays back a video or voice memo that they've made after installing iOS 11.3, there is no sound
The alleged defect is informally known as "Loop Disease" online. Despite acknowledging the issue internally, Apple never posted a service program about the issue on its website, and it never responded to our repeated requests for comment.

As far as an underlying cause, the class action lawsuit alleged that "the materials used in the ‌iPhone‌'s external casing are insufficient and inadequate to protect the internal parts," eventually resulting in the audio chip losing electrical contact with the logic board due to "flexion" of the device's external casing during regular use. It's unclear how many iPhone 7 and iPhone 7 Plus units were affected in total.

Apple initially said its service providers could request a "warranty exception" for affected iPhones, which resulted in free repairs for at least some customers, but that abruptly ended in July 2018 after Apple deleted the document. Afterwards, some customers had to pay an out-of-warranty fee of around $300 in the U.S. for a fix.

If the settlement is approved, those customers will finally be able to get at least some of their money back from Apple after years of silence.

(Thanks, Michael Burkhardt!)

Article Link: Apple to Pay iPhone 7 Users in U.S. Who Experienced 'Loop Disease' Audio Issues
 
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Now do one concerning that all Macbook Pros are delivered with some form of dents and scratches in the screen since the M1 series.
 
  • Wow
Reactions: mrfunnypenguin
That happened more than people think. I recall in my previous job, a couple of months after we started ordering 7’s, that issue would happen and would essentially turn the phones into bricks when it came to calling.
 
It was something Apple Stores seen a lot of reports about. Symptoms usually where the speakerphone icon greyed out and no function to the microphone on the iPhone 7/7 Plus. This issue became present after a later iOS update, initially iPhones where replaced for free the first week of this issue occurring yet about a week after this it was treated as out of warranty, after engineering had investigated this issue. Technicians where advised to position that this was caused by some form of misuse of the device and an out of warranty fee applied to replace the whole device.
 
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Blame Apple. They could just lower their profit 0.01%.

They could also have done a voluntary recall/replace for affected units.
I never understand why companies don’t just do that to begin with. Seems like it would cost them a lot less overall. But maybe not… might be cheaper to cut a few checks plus legal costs then to remanufacture however many devices.
 
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they could just lower their profit margins from 30% to 1%. might as well argue that.
No, because that argument is nonsense. A doable option would be for that greedy MBA scum Tim Cook to lower profit margins to at least the level that they were under Steve Jobs, which was still one of the highest in the industry.
 
Don't have my 7 anymore but it had the speaker problem but AppleCare took care of it. :p
 
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