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Judge Approves Settlement in iPod Suit

BabbaBooie writes "According to AppleInsider, on Thursday a San Mateo County judge granted final approval of a settlement in the iPod class action suit that affects as many as 1.3 million iPod owners who may have been victim to poor or defective batteries. Under the settlement, owners of either a first- or second-generation model are entitled to $25 cash or $50 credit at the Apple store. Owners of third-generation iPod models are entitled to a free replacement battery if the battery fails. The deadline for submitting a claim is September 30, 2005. Lawyers say the settlement could cost Apple as much as $15m."

3 of 293 comments (clear)

  1. Re:And this is different from... by jatemack · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    NICE one! I love the creative I hate Microsoft spins /.ers come up with, especially on an Apple story. Well done.

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  2. Re:And this is different from... by saddino · · Score: 1, Offtopic

    More people have been victim to poor and defective MS software for over a decade...where's the class action lawsuit there?

    I guessed you missed the news two years ago (and the boat, since the claim period is closed):

    Microsoft settled with most of the fifty states and District of Columbia for (place pinky against mouth) 1.1 billion dollars in a class action suit for "overcharging" for MS Windows and MS Office. I have my $30 coupon (good towards any company's hardware or software) right here.

    As with most class actions, the claimants are usually far fewer than theoretically possible because people (like yourself) fail to learn about these settlements during the claim period.

  3. Re:That's cool! by swillden · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    I love that they do - but the fact that you can't change them just plain sucks. To this day, I can't figure out why they did that.

    And I can't figure out why they made a laptop with a non-upgradeable hard drive. I'm about to try replacing the drive in my wife's iBook, and I'm pretty nervous about it. You have to pretty much disassemble the whole machine to get to where the drive is.

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