Apple To Pay $14M For iPhone Slowdown: Eligible Canadian Users Can Get Up To $150 From 'Batterygate' Settlement

Apple Inc. AAPL has agreed to pay $14.4 million to settle the “Batterygate” class-action lawsuit in Canada. The lawsuit accused Apple of secretly slowing down iPhones as their batteries aged. Approved by a Canadian court, the settlement will see eligible iPhone users receive between CA$17.50 ($12.91) and CA$150 ($110.62) from Apple.

What Happened: The class-action lawsuit claimed that Apple had covertly slowed down iPhones as their batteries degraded. This performance throttling was introduced in 2017 to prevent unexpected iPhone shutdowns. However, Apple did not adequately communicate this change to its customers, reported 9to5Mac on Monday.

The settlement applies to all of Canada except for Quebec.

Apple is yet to respond to the queries sent by Benzinga.

See Also: Neither Sundar Pichai Nor Sergey Brin—This Ex-Employee Warned Google 5 Years Ago That AI Was Coming For Their Search Engine

The judge overseeing the case deemed the proposed settlement “fair, reasonable and in the best interest of the class,” according to class counsel Michael Peerless. The settlement website will soon provide further details on how to file a claim.

Eligible users include those who owned or purchased an iPhone 6, 6 Plus, 6s, 6s Plus, SE, 7, or 7 Plus with iOS 10.2.1 or later installed before December 21, 2017.

Why It Matters: This settlement comes amid ongoing concerns over Apple’s battery issues. Users had complained about the rapid deterioration of the iPhone 14’s battery health, sparking a potential “Batterygate Redux” ahead of the iPhone 15 launch.

However, in a more recent development, Apple announced that the battery life of its iPhone 15 series is significantly longer than initially projected. The company stated that the iPhone 15 could maintain 80% of its original capacity at 1000 complete charge cycles, attributing the improved lifespan to ongoing updates to battery components and power management systems over the years.

Image Credits – Shutterstock

Read Next: Big Brother Knows Your Alerts? FBI’s Push Notification Tracking Raises Privacy Alarms

Image source – Apple


Engineered by Benzinga Neuro, Edited by Pooja Rajkumari


The GPT-4-based Benzinga Neuro content generation system exploits the extensive Benzinga Ecosystem, including native data, APIs, and more to create comprehensive and timely stories for you. Learn more.


Market News and Data brought to you by Benzinga APIs
Comments
Loading...
Posted In: NewsTechGeneralApple batteryApple CanadaAppleverseBatterygateConsumer TechlawsuitPooja RajkumariStories That Matter
Benzinga simplifies the market for smarter investing

Trade confidently with insights and alerts from analyst ratings, free reports and breaking news that affects the stocks you care about.

Join Now: Free!