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The Courts Hardware

Florida Man Sues Samsung, Says Galaxy Note 7 Exploded (reuters.com) 102

An anonymous reader shares a Reuters report: Samsung Electronics Co was sued on Friday by a Florida man who said he suffered severe burns after his Galaxy Note 7 smartphone exploded in his front pants pocket. The lawsuit by Jonathan Strobel may be the first in the United States by a Samsung phone user against the South Korean company over a battery defect linked to the Note 7. It was filed one day after Samsung recalled about 1 million Note 7s sold in the United States. Samsung has received 92 reports of batteries overheating in the United States, including 26 reports of burns and 55 reports of property damage, U.S. safety regulators said. "We don't comment on pending litigation," Samsung spokeswoman Danielle Meister Cohen said in an email. "We are urging all Note 7 owners to power their device down and exchange it immediately." Strobel, 28, of Boca Raton, said he was in a Costco store in Palm Beach Gardens on Sept. 9 when his Note 7 exploded. He said the phone burned directly through his pants, resulting in severe burns on his right leg.
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Florida Man Sues Samsung, Says Galaxy Note 7 Exploded

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  • But! (Score:5, Funny)

    by Ol Olsoc ( 1175323 ) on Saturday September 17, 2016 @05:44PM (#52908671)
    He withdrew the suit because the Samsung had a phone jack. Priorities people, priorities!
  • by BigSlowTarget ( 325940 ) on Saturday September 17, 2016 @05:57PM (#52908717) Journal

    Here are their claims:

    - You will be fine if you don't leave it charging overnight

    - They will have replacement handsets sometime in the next few weeks.

    The first claim is false according to many sources including Samsung. As for the second, they are supposed to have replacements by the 21st but hey that's just a schedule. No one sticks to those apparently.

    • by Anonymous Coward

      The failure is a problem with the charging circuit off a single one of their supply lines. The recall issue can only occur during charging, so the line from the plaintiff's lawyer about "the recall came too late for my client" is entirely false, unless of course he charges his phone in his pocket, in which case I'd have to ask what the fuck.

      • Auxiliary battery pack maybe? A lot of folks have those portable power packs for keeping the phone running for extra time. Especially if he was an avid Pokemon Go player or similar.
  • Bottom line is that I'd already decided I don't want another Galaxy smartphone, though my overall feelings are mixed. This battery fiasco is liable to make my wants moot vis a vis buying anything from Samsung. In accord with the brokenness of today's stock market, the overreactions and spasms of the stock price may destroy the company. Stock price is just a matter of opinion, and it's usually stupid opinion, especially when it's a computer's. What matters is the visibility of the fiasco, and this one is way

  • That "Halt and catch fire" is only an expression, and not supposed to mean that the phone should literally explode and burn.

    • That "Halt and catch fire" is only an expression, and not supposed to mean that the phone should literally explode and burn.

      The expression has an origin story [catb.org] with a kernel of truth.

  • by p0p0 ( 1841106 ) on Saturday September 17, 2016 @07:32PM (#52909059)
    Florida Man Strikes Again!
  • the iphones no longer have headphone jacks — and the samsungs explode in yer pants..!

    bleah

  • That's what she said
  • I think I'd be willing to bet my next paycheck that the phone "exploding" is hyperbole by either the plaintiff or the press. Moreover, didn't the initial reports stipulate that the batteries overheated during charging? It's difficult to believe that a phone not connected to anything spontaneously detonated in a pants pocket. The trial might be really entertaining, but Samsung will probably settle out of court.

  • I have not seen a single bit of evidence to support the word "explode" being used in context with the Samsung battery problems. I certainly believe they melt, catch fire, even burst into flames... but *explode*???

    http://www.dictionary.com/brow... [dictionary.com]

    • by Osgeld ( 1900440 )

      the rapid expansion of the battery before it goes pop and burst into flames may be considered an explosion, but I have always felt the use of that word was a bit dramatic with lithium batteries

  • hasn't Florida Man [twitter.com] been punished enough already? [apnews.com]

    "I need to get a (protective) bubble,"

  • Dear designers:

    When Apple had the "courage" to remove headphone jacks to force the sale of expensive bluetooth earbuds, they did so in a way that is pissing people off and losing them business.

    Your interpretation of that into "Be salesy! Encourage bluetooth device for listening by making phone courageously explode!" was very poor and might lose you *A LOT OF FUTURE BUSINESS*. Learn to translate the copying of business models. /humor

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