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Macbook Owner With Defective GPU Beats Apple In Court

New submitter RockoW writes "A few years ago, Apple sold defective computers of the MacBook Pro line. They had the defective Nvidia 8600M GT GPU. In this case Apple refused to take the computer back and issue me a refund. Instead, they promised to replace the 8600M GT boards when they failed, up to four years from the date of purchase. Three years later, the MacBook Pro failed and they refused to replace it. This guy took them to the court and won by their own means."

43 of 280 comments (clear)

  1. If You're Going To Make Promises ... by WrongSizeGlass · · Score: 4, Insightful

    If Apple promised to replace parts they knew to be defective for up to four years then they'd better step up. The court costs far outweighed the costs of replacing the GPU in his MacBook (and probably 100's of others). The cost of the bad press? It seems Apple has always been willing to test the patience of their customers' loyalties.

    1. Re:If You're Going To Make Promises ... by v1 · · Score: 4, Informative

      If Apple promised to replace parts they knew to be defective for up to four years then they'd better step up. The court costs far outweighed the costs of replacing the GPU in his MacBook (and probably 100's of others). The cost of the bad press? It seems Apple has always been willing to test the patience of their customers' loyalties.

      For more details on the problem check this link. Here's the header:

      In July 2008, NVIDIA publicly acknowledged a higher than normal failure rate for some of their graphics processors due to a packaging defect. At that same time, NVIDIA assured Apple that Mac computers with these graphics processors were not affected. However, after an Apple-led investigation, Apple has determined that some MacBook Pro computers with the NVIDIA GeForce 8600M GT graphics processor may be affected. If the NVIDIA graphics processor in your MacBook Pro has failed, or fails within four years of the original date of purchase, a repair will be done free of charge, even if your MacBook Pro is out of warranty.

      I'm surprised anyone has been refused replacement inside 4 years. I bet I've repaired around 170 of these units for this problem, and I have only just recently started seeing Apple refuse a warranty repair, because the computers are starting to cross 4 years old. The only time I see problems of this nature is if they purchase old stock and don't register. Apple assumes a computer is sold 30 days after manufacture if you don't send in your registration. If you need warranty service and are on the edge you may need to submit your proof of purchase to update your purchase date on record with Apple to get warranty coverage. Maybe that played into this case?

      And this problem stems not from Apple, but from Nvidia. I started seeing this issue on new machines a few months after this model was first released, and Apple started going rounds with Nvidia around the 10 month mark, just before these machines were going to start falling out of the 1 year warranty. Nvidia insisted this was not a defect and refused to cover anything. We had to start refusing repairs for some machines after the 1 year mark. Then about 2 months after that I found that Apple had gotten sick of Nvidia stalling and denying, and decided to cover these repairs, before they had even gotten Nvidia to budge. Apple sent notice to users that had paid for a repair that would now be considered covered, and refunds were issued. Apple started the repair extension program for this issue and covered repairs from that point forward. This was months before Nvidia was forced to accept responsibility and start reimbursing Apple for the defect.

      So I find it unfortunate that Apple is receiving a lot of FUD and bad press on this. They do tend to go the extra mile for their customers, they're consistently rated at the TOP for customer service. They were footing the bill for Nvidia's screw-up long before they were guaranteed of getting anything back. Try to find an example of that from any of the other computer manufacturers out there.

      --
      I work for the Department of Redundancy Department.
    2. Re:If You're Going To Make Promises ... by StikyPad · · Score: 4, Insightful

      They were footing the bill for Nvidia's screw-up

      No, they were footing the bill for their own screw-up. The part may have been defective, and nVidia may have made it, but Apple approved it for use in their own products based on, clearly, insufficient validation that the part met their standards. In the real world, that's how it works.

    3. Re:If You're Going To Make Promises ... by idontgno · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Maybe they calculate, based on reasonable predictions of variables such as the likelihood of lawsuits and the corresponding costs of such lawsuits, that they can profit more by offering the warranties (positive marketing) and then not honoring them (reduced after-sale cost) and paying out the (comparatively) few lawsuit judgments. And, sadly for decency and goodness, they were probably right.

      --
      Welcome to the Panopticon. Used to be a prison, now it's your home.
    4. Re:If You're Going To Make Promises ... by idontgno · · Score: 4, Informative

      Well, when all the litigation amongst the companies shook out, it turns out that Nvidia is footing the bill for their own screw-up.

      As much as it pains me to defend Apple's corporate behavior in any matter, Nvidia was clearly in the wrong. Apple had no advance knowledge of Nvidia's bad engineering and dishonest documentation. The GPUs failed after time and use, so only an unrealistically long engineering evaluation period by any customer of Nvidia's parts would have uncovered the issue. Apple was boned, and Nvidia did the boning.

      This little peccadillo on Nvidia's part is how they wound up on my "never buy" list.

      The Inquirer chased the story quite intensively back in the 2009 timeframe. This query will give you the list of the articles there that might provide a bit of context to this story.

      --
      Welcome to the Panopticon. Used to be a prison, now it's your home.
    5. Re:If You're Going To Make Promises ... by AmiMoJo · · Score: 4, Informative

      So I find it unfortunate that Apple is receiving a lot of FUD and bad press on this.

      Because they don't deserve it for refusing to honour the promise they made and having to be taken to court over it?

      --
      const int one = 65536; (Silvermoon, Texture.cs)
      SJW, n: "Someone I don't like, and by the way I'm a fuckwit" - AC
    6. Re:If You're Going To Make Promises ... by StikyPad · · Score: 3, Informative

      This technically wasn't even a manufacturing defect. It was a specifications defect. Nvidia provides manufacturers with very detailed information on their raw products, including cooling requirements.

      Tomato, tomato. The distinction is important for correcting the problem, but not for avoiding the consequences.

      If I'm a cabinet manufacturer and I order hinges that are rated at 100,000 operations I expect them to last that long on the average, you can't expect me to make some cabinets and then open and close them 50,000 times to make sure the hardware is as durable as the manufacturer claims it is before selling any. Manufactures have to put some trust in their OEMs' specs.

      They don't have to; they choose to because it's usually cheaper. The fact is that in this case, it turned out to be more expensive, but on the whole it's still a gain I'm sure. I can tell you for a fact that you don't take the manufacturer at their word when you put together a sub or a space shuttle; you test everything before acceptance and then perform NDT on every piece before it's used in production. While I don't expect Apple or any consumer goods manufacturer to go to those lengths (because it's quite expensive), most electronic manufacturers test samples (including Apple) and with some examples failing within weeks, this was surely a case of insufficient testing. Apple decided to replace them as they failed rather than issuing a voluntary recall, and that's their prerogative, but to claim they had no responsibility is just absurd.

    7. Re:If You're Going To Make Promises ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Informative

      This reminds me of Toyota refusing to replace engines that had failed after only ~25,000 miles. They claimed the blame belonged to the customer, and forced owners to shell-out ~$6000 on new engines for their 1-2 year old cars/trucks.

      Nope, never happened. You have failed twice now to back up that claim with proof (and been called out both times, and not just by me), therefore we are forced to conclude that you are lying.

      And if the only "proof" you can provide is another lmgtfy link, don't bother. I told you before I'm not doing your work for you. You make a claim, back it up or be prepared to get called out for it. You wouldn't turn in a research paper without properly citing your sources, would you?

  2. Re:Cool, but... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Apple charges top dollar for their hardware.

    You would feel bad about "picking on them" for why?

  3. Re:Cool, but... by CnlPepper · · Score: 5, Informative

    Apple is responsible for the products it supplies. It is up to Apple to seek damages from Nvidia, not the consumers.

  4. It just works. by i+kan+reed · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I remember that slogan. Not too long ago even. Before that it was "Think different" and buy the most common mp3 player on the planet. I dislike apple because I dislike marketing, and Apple is like an avatar of marketing; the essence of style over substance given form.

    1. Re:It just works. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Funny

      So many of you marketing haters forget that their gear actually fucking performs, esp. in the hands of a skilled user.

      Mod up, we have someone who knows how to hold their iToys right! Everyone, crowd around his wisdom and experience, we have much to learn.

    2. Re:It just works. by bobbutts · · Score: 3, Insightful

      "hand built" You mean you slapped some components into a case and installed your own OS? It appears you can't OUTPERFORM a Mac for a fraction of the price like the rest of us system builders, which makes you a failure as well

  5. Agreement by Bananatree3 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Apple got slammed in court for one simple reason: they guaranteed replacement for 4 years. 3 years in, they reneged on their promise. Simple, blatant double talk.

    The customer had the documentation to prove his case, and he won.

    1. Re:Agreement by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

      That can't be right...

      How could that customer create forgeries and attack Apple and get away with it?!

      The nerve of some people.

    2. Re:Agreement by binarylarry · · Score: 3, Funny

      Agreed. Fuck this guy.

      He should be banished from Apple Island and be forced to walk the cursed earth... using Windows Phone.

      --
      Mod me down, my New Earth Global Warmingist friends!
    3. Re:Agreement by jd2112 · · Score: 4, Funny

      Agreed. Fuck this guy.

      He should be banished from Apple Island and be forced to walk the cursed earth... using Windows Phone.

      I think that forcing Windows Phone on him counts as cruel and unusual punishment.

      --
      Any insufficiently advanced magic is indistinguishable from technology.
  6. Re:Cool, but... by acid06 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Because Apple is the company which promised to replace his laptop up to 4 years after the date of purchase if it failed but then refused to replace it 3 years later?
    Sure, the problem is with the GPU, but since Apple itself *promised* to do something for a customer, they should respect their own words.

  7. Re:Cool, but... by CosaNostra+Pizza+Inc · · Score: 4, Insightful

    This is a huge problem for almost every manufacturer. Take a look at the HP DV series of laptops for example. Why are we picking on Apple and not the GPU manufacturers here?

    maybe because Apple reneged on their promise. That's reason enough.

  8. Re:Cool, but... by Nominei · · Score: 4, Informative

    Nvidia settled a class action lawsuit about these GPUs.

    (link: http://www.techspot.com/news/43614-customers-get-shafted-in-nvidia-class-action-suit.html)

  9. Not what you think by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I did in warrantied repairs for an Apple authorized service provider for two years. I can't tell you how many of these repairs apple picked up the tab on. I have never seen another computer company take as much responsibility as they have on this issue. The repair to replace the logic board that contained the defective GPU was a $1700 repair from a third-party authorized repair center and I did an average of 2 to 3 a week for 2 years.

    Try stacking up those numbers against any other computer companies defective products in what they did to fix them

    1. Re:Not what you think by Hope+Thelps · · Score: 4, Informative

      The repair to replace the logic board that contained the defective GPU was a $1700 repair from a third-party authorized repair center and I did an average of 2 to 3 a week for 2 years.

      From the article: "At one point, the judge asked Apple how much it would have cost them to have simply replaced my logic board when I had taken it in, and one of the Apple guys said “Oh, it wouldn’t have cost us anything, Nvidia foots the bill for each board we replace.”"

      --
      To summarise the summary of the summary: people are a problem. ~ h2g2
  10. Re:Cool, but... by Ecuador · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Because they admitted in court that it would not cost them anything to fix it, nVidia was paying the bill, but they still refused and they didn't even have an argument on why they were refusing. They just wanted to make it hard for their customer. RTFA, the description of how the trial went is comedy gold.
    I've had enough horror stories with with Apple products around me to not be surprised, it seems that for every iphone they replace no-questions-asked they void the warranty on a few iMacs just to balance it out. Since the average apple customer thinks Apple can do no wrong, these incidents usually don't generate any fuss.
    Good for the OP!

    --
    Violence is the last refuge of the incompetent. Polar Scope Align for iOS
  11. Re:Cool, but... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Interesting

    This is a huge problem for almost every manufacturer.

    And Apple is one of the few who gets apologists jumping in to defend them by pointing this out.

  12. Re:Cool, but... by sjames · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Because it's up to Apple to replace the Apple hardware. They are then free to seek damages from the GPU manufacturer.

  13. Re:Cool, but... by cjcela · · Score: 4, Informative

    Don't be so blind. The customer purchased the computer AND an extended warranty from Apple. The GPU manufacturer said to all parties they will foot the bill for the defective hardware. The repair was free for Apple, but they decided to take this customer to court just because. Then, in court, they lied to the judge, saying that the hardware was different, etc. Apple is usually good with warranties, but notoriously for forcing their way on everybody, be it for good or bad. In this case, they were wrong, and behave like morons, and drag one of their customers to court. It is infuriating.

  14. Re:Cool, but... by gl4ss · · Score: 4, Insightful

    dunno, but if I bought a lotus from lotus and it blew up I'd complain to lotus - not to the company that was contracted to do the piece that broke. it's not like brembo(or whatever) is responsible to consumers for toyotas brake problems..

    toyotas brakes fail and people don't go complaining to brembo..

    --
    world was created 5 seconds before this post as it is.
  15. Re:Cool, but... by XxtraLarGe · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Because this is Slashdot. Apple is that evil bad nasty walled-garden company that makes products those filthy commoners like...

    No. I'm a Mac user, and Apple has always done the right thing if something went wrong with the hardware on my computer, but in this case they were wrong. They went back on a promise, they should be held responsible.

    --
    Taking guns away from the 99% gives the 1% 100% of the power.
  16. Re:One guy had a problem, won a legitimate lawsuit by UnknowingFool · · Score: 3, Informative

    Same thing with my MacBook. The HD failed after 4 years ( no extended warranty). I was looking up how to replace it myself as I thought 4 years of constant use was reasonable. I came across an Apple support article that depicted the exact failure messages I was getting stating to bring in the laptop. So I made an appointment at the nearest Apple store and pasted the article in the ticket. They replaced the HD free of charge. They could not replace it with the same HD model or OS version so they upgraded both.

    --
    Well, there's spam egg sausage and spam, that's not got much spam in it.
  17. Opposite Anecdote by IKnwThePiecesFt · · Score: 4, Interesting

    That's strange... I had this exact same problem and Apple replaced my motherboard for free when the time came. I wonder why they denied it for him?

    1. Re:Opposite Anecdote by RyuuzakiTetsuya · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Because the machine failed to boot. If the GPU failed, it'd boot but no image on screen.

      Which apple thusly correctly blamed on other parts of the logic board.

      While Apple is technically correct here, the failure on Apple's part is customer satisfaction. They should've replaced the board. I think the Judge was right in categorizing any logic board failure as being within the scope of that replacement program too.

      Apple's not evil, they're just dicks though. Evil would've been to deny the problem ever existed, or to replace affected machine owners with lower class machines, like some OEMs did.

      --
      Non impediti ratione cogitationus.
  18. Re:Cool, but... by jedidiah · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Not an excuse. They are a "premium luxury" brand. If they couldn't do right by the customer with the parts they had on hand then they should have given the customer a better replacement.

    THIS is what separates the real "quality" brands from the ones that are just over hyped by mindless consipicous consumers.

    --
    A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
  19. Re:Cool, but... by jedidiah · · Score: 5, Insightful

    You've got it backwards.

    It's the shills and apologists that breed haters.

    If there were less mindless hype surrounding Apple, there would simply be less of a story here. Although if Apple just lived up to their supposed reputation there wouldn't have been any story at all.

    --
    A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
  20. Re:Cool, but... by jd2112 · · Score: 3, Funny

    Thats the problem. The lawyers made millions and all Apple got was a $10 coupon off thier next nvidia purchase.

    --
    Any insufficiently advanced magic is indistinguishable from technology.
  21. Re:Cool, but... by JoeMerchant · · Score: 3, Informative

    In my case, the GPU wasn't at fault, it was Apple's faulty application of heat sink compound that caused the chip to fail.

  22. Which screwed everyone by jbov · · Score: 4, Informative

    The terms of the class action suit were not favorable for the consumers, as your link states. For replacements from HP, everyone got the same Compaq budget 15" notebook, which retailed at around $270 at the time that the notebook owners received their replacements. Many of the consumers, including myself, had purchased notebooks which cost well over $1000. It is argued by some, that since prices have lowered since the initial purchase, the replacement notebook was comparable to the one initially purchased. This was untrue in my case. It also doesn't take into account that many of these notebooks were unusable during the years it took for a class action lawsuit to take place, and replacement notebooks awarded.

    In my case, it is basically as if I purchased two $1200 notebooks, and didn't have them shipped to me until 3 years later. By the time I got them, I found out they weren't even the correct specs. Since it was 3 years later, I could have gotten much more for $1200.

    The suit pitted the consumers against nvidia themselves, bypassing the computer manufacturers. I don't think this was an appropriate action. The manufacturers share some blame. They took the payoffs from nvidia to replace the GPUs under warranty, until the warranties ran out and it was all swept under the rug. At the time, the manufacturers knew the replacement parts were a time-bomb waiting to fail. They didn't care, because nvidia was funding them to do the repairs anyway. So, the manufacturers were making money by *not* replacing the GPU with a non-defective GPU.

    In the case of HP, they lied about replacing the GPU with another defective GPU, and slapped a 90 day warranty on the service work. When I complained to them, and the BBB, they lied and said they replaced it with a different model GPU. My own eyes and lspci spoke a different story.

  23. Re:Cool, but... by billybobbubbasmith · · Score: 5, Funny

    that hamburger....i think you are using it wrong

  24. Re:Cool, but... by OhHellWithIt · · Score: 5, Insightful

    In TFA, the author noted that one of the ironies was that Apple said in court that Nvidia would pay for the replacement. However, the thing that struck me was his revelation that he had received lots of contacts from people who have also had the same kind of failure and have paid Apple or trashed their machines. It seems pretty obvious that the reason Apple probably spent more than the cost of satisfying this guy's claim was to prevent a precedent's being set in a large class-action suit against them.

    --
    "Who controls the past controls the future. Who controls the present controls the past." -- George Orwell
  25. Re:Cool, but... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Funny

    Wow, a top of the line lemon. Good job!

  26. Re:Cool, but... by Wain13001 · · Score: 3, Funny

    I find it sad that I actually want to applaud you on here for managing to distinguish your personal anecdotal experience from the given situation and make clear, sound judgements based on available information. Did you RTFA too??

  27. "wouldn't boot"? by v1 · · Score: 3, Informative

    "wouldn't boot" is pretty general... Apple's Repair Extension Programs cover specific models, for a limited additional duration, that are demonstrating specific symptoms which are being caused by a very specific problem.

    We get people in from time to time with a computer that has an REP on that model, and they're expecting Apple to cover something else out of warranty. And we get people demanding we "fix" the computer simply because there is an REP on that model even though it's working fine. That's not how REPs work. (we had a school show up with a panel van FULL of emacs that were listed on an REP, we tested ALL of them and repaired TWO)

    If it powered on, and chimed (possibly after clearing pram to turn the volume back up) but showed no video, and could be heard to boot up (hdd access) and possibly even get interaction from it (turning volume up and down and hearing the reply) and external video was also dead, THAT should be covered and I would be surprised if they didn't cover it. All AASPs were given a special tool to test the computer and verify the problem also, and this test could be run after the video was out, OR before it was out, and could identify a computer that was beginning to fail, even if the symptoms were very minor or infrequent. If it was demonstrating symptoms, this test should have been run on your computer. Users tend to put off taking computers in for service, so only about 3% of the machines I saw with this problem still had usable video by the time they checked them in.

    However, if it failed to turn on, or failed to post at all, no, that's not the issue the REP was for, that's not a video problem, and you were not entitled to coverage by this REP. I also ran into a couple that were having "no video" problems but that didn't fail the special test app, those users had to pay for their repair because it was the same part, but not the same cause.

    I won't say that every AASP and Apple Store does the right thing. I'm just sayin' how it's supposed to work, and how I make it work here. If you still think they didn't react correctly, call applecare (even now) and talk with them about it. I've seen them make things right for people outwards of 5 years after purchase, with a discount on a new machine for example.

    --
    I work for the Department of Redundancy Department.
  28. Re:Cool, but... by BlackSnake112 · · Score: 3, Interesting

    If I knew that video card 123abc had a record of failing I would avoid that video card in any product no matter who it was from. Then again I try to be an informed customer. Not everyone is. As others have stated, people go to the company they bought the item from when it fails.

    Apple is a pain in the ass when it come to their stuff breaking. They have their own tools and tests that they run. For example: we have an iMac with bad memory. Memtest shows errors every time. We bring the under warrantee iMac to Apple to replace the memory. The Imac is fired up at teh Apple store. It fails to boot and only beeps. It is the memory beep according to the 4 Apple store people. A few more boot attempts, the iMac boots but has trouble booting from their USB drive. They take the Imac to run their memory tests on the iMac. A few days later they tell us the Imac is repaired. What was done? Nothing. They found nothing wrong. We take the Imac back. It has the same errors as before. Again, memtest shows errors. This time we just replace the memory ourselves. Now there is no issue. If Apple had used memtest they would have seen the errors. They have to use Apple approved tests. There are free tests for memory and other things that can be used. We can prove that the memory has bad sectors. According to Apple, that doesn't matter since their tests says otherwise. I did ask for a printout, screen shot, something of the test. They could not provide that. They also said that we could not run the test ourselves. When the other Imacs showed signs of the same problem (all bought at the same time). We ran memtest, again bad memory. We just replaced it rather then going to Apple. No need for the longer down time and the headache from the Apple repair people.

  29. Re:Cool, but... by LinuxIsGarbage · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I'm amazed at how nVidia tried pawning this one on the OEMs, insisting nothing is wrong when thousands of HP, Dell, Lenovo, and Apple Laptops were having GPU blowouts.

    The 8800 also gets lots of attention, but the Geforce Go 6150 and 7200 chips delaminate in huge quantities as well. My HP laptop was sent away once on warranty work when the wireless card dropped out (first sign of a failure). It's now dissapeared again and out of warranty. Surprising the lazy-man reflow actually works:
    -Remove battery and HDD
    -Turn machine on and wrap in blankets
    -Allow to cook for a couple hours.
    -Replace battery and HDD.