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Earlier this year, Apple agreed to settle a U.S. class action lawsuit that accused the company of "secretly throttling" older iPhone models. Now, eligible iPhone owners are beginning to be notified about their legal rights and options.

iPhone-6s-camera.jpg

Under the proposed settlement, Apple will provide a cash payment of approximately $25 to each eligible iPhone owner who submits a claim, with its total payout to fall between $310 million and $500 million. The exact amount that each iPhone owner receives could vary slightly based on the number of claims submitted.

The class includes any U.S. resident who owns or previously owned an iPhone 6, iPhone 6 Plus, iPhone 6s, iPhone 6s Plus, and/or iPhone SE that ran iOS 10.2.1 or later, and/or an iPhone 7 or iPhone 7 Plus that ran iOS 11.2 or later, before December 21, 2017. Class members also must have experienced "diminished performance" on their devices.

A website has been set up where eligible class members can submit a claim or review their other options, including excluding themselves from the lawsuit to retain the ability to sue Apple individually over the matter. All claims must be submitted online or received by letter mail by October 6, 2020, or else payment is forfeited.

Apple has denied all allegations and is entering into this settlement to "avoid burdensome and costly litigation." The settlement is not an admission of wrongdoing by Apple, according to the U.S. District Court for Northern California.

The class action lawsuit was filed in December 2017, shortly after Apple revealed that it throttles the maximum performance of some older iPhone models with chemically aged batteries when necessary in order to prevent the devices from unexpectedly shutting down. The complaint described the move as "one of the largest consumer frauds in history."

Apple introduced this battery/performance management system in iOS 10.2.1, but it did not initially mention the change in the update's release notes. Likewise, in a statement issued a month later, Apple still only mentioned vague "improvements" resulting in a significant reduction in unexpected ‌iPhone‌ shutdowns.

Apple only revealed exactly what the so-called "improvements" were after Primate Labs founder John Poole visualized that some ‌iPhone‌ 6s and ‌iPhone‌ 7 devices suddenly had lower benchmark scores starting with iOS 10.2.1 and iOS 11.2 respectively, despite operating at maximum performance on previous versions.

Apple apologized for its lack of communication in December 2017, and reduced the price of battery replacements to $29 for ‌iPhone‌ 6 and newer through the end of 2018 to appease customers.

(Thanks, Ben Hurley and Oscar Falcon!)

Article Link: iPhone Users Who Experienced 'Batterygate' Can Now File to Receive Around $25 Settlement From Apple
 
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Less than the cost of a battery replacement. I’d do it if they offered a battery replacement on my X which was a replacement for my 6+.
 
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Apple throttling devices with aging batteries to protect the user from the device shutting off is "one of the largest frauds in history"??

Apple's only mistake was not communicating this to the user or giving the user the option to run at full speed with the risk of shutting down vs. accepting the throttling. But Apple didn't implement this feature to harm consumers.

$25 is not going to make a difference in the lives of most iPhone owners. But the settlement will surely enrich the legal team that prosecuted this frivolous lawsuit.
 
I sold my iPhone 6S+ but was able to pull my serial number from iTunes backups. First step assumes Catalina

  1. Plug in current iPhone, select it on sidebar in finder. Click on "Manage Backups"
  2. Select backup you believe is from old phone, right click on it and "Show in Finder". The backup folder will be highlighted - open it.
  3. Open Info.plist in TextEdit
  4. Search for "Serial Number"
    1. <key>Serial Number</key>
      <string>SERIAL NUMBER HERE</string>
  5. Copy serial number into https://checkcoverage.apple.com/ just to make sure its the correct device.
 
Won't be easy for people as the lookup errors out. I've had 4 phones affected by this and it just says there was an error when I use my e-mail to look up.
 
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The website is just giving errors. I put in the serial number for my iPhone 7 and get this error: "The Serial Number you provided does not match the records in our database. Please check the Serial Number you entered to be sure it is complete and that you typed it correctly. Some common errors include entering Zeros as 'O', typing a capital “B” instead of an 8, and entering the Serial Number for a different device that is not eligible under the Settlement. Please try inputting your Serial Number again, or use the Search Tool below to locate your Serial Number."

There are no errors with the serial number (passes the checkcoverage.apple.com test).

My iPhone 6 also gives errors.

EDIT: Now it's working when checking by address.
 
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I had several of these, could have got $100 from them but that's US only.
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The only people who made out on this controversy is the lawyers ... not surprising.

They're also the only people who placed a bet on it, i.e. spending hundreds or thousands of hours of work to get it done without charging people like you and I anything.
 
This is weird. I put in the serial number for my iPhone 7 and get this error: "The Serial Number you provided does not match the records in our database. Please check the Serial Number you entered to be sure it is complete and that you typed it correctly. Some common errors include entering Zeros as 'O', typing a capital “B” instead of an 8, and entering the Serial Number for a different device that is not eligible under the Settlement. Please try inputting your Serial Number again, or use the Search Tool below to locate your Serial Number."

There are no errors with the serial number (passes the checkcoverage.apple.com test).

My iPhone 6 also gives errors.
Because batterygate only affects certain versions of iOS, maybe Apple checks your update records on the device you enter, and if you never had that OS on it, it throws an error.

I'm not saying you didn't have one of the OSes on your phones, but I genuinely can't remember if I did.
 
Because batterygate only affects certain versions of iOS, maybe Apple checks your update records on the device you enter, and if you never had that OS on it, it throws an error.

I'm not saying you didn't have one of the OSes on your phones, but I genuinely can't remember if I did.

That could be the case for my old iPhone 6 but I definitely had that version of iOS (and newer) on my iPhone 7. I don't really care, it's only $50 and I'm not a fan of most class action lawsuits but I wanted to check because I have the serial numbers handy.
 
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