Apple Hit With Yet Another 'Batterygate' Lawsuit (zdnet.com) 62
An anonymous reader quotes a report from ZDNet: The memory of "Batterygate" continues to be a thorn in Apple's side. In case you need a reminder, "Batterygate" refers to a 2016/17 scandal where Apple added an undocumented battery throttling capabilities to iOS 10.2.1 designed to slow the performance of the iPhone if the battery was deemed to be worn. It also came with unexpected side effects, causing handsets to reboot in cold weather or when the battery's charge level was low. The feature was initially rolled out to iPhone 6, iPhone 6s, and iPhone SE and later expanded to include the iPhone 7, 7 Plus, 8, 8 Plus and iPhone X models.
This latest UK-based multimillion-pound legal claim has been launched by Justin Gutmann, a consumer rights campaigner, and alleges that Apple deliberately misled users, and rather than roll out a battery recall or replacement program; the company instead pushed out this feature to cover up the fact that older iPhone batteries were not able to cope with the new power demands put on them.
Apple did eventually roll out a $29 battery replacement program, a program that saw the company carry out 11 million battery replacements in 2018, compared to the 1 to 2 million that would normally be carried out in a year. This resulted in Apple issuing a profit warning in January 2019, the company's first since 2002. If Apple loses, the company could be forced to pay damages of more than $950m to the 25 million people who purchased affected iPhones. Following the US settlement in March 2020, Apple agreed to settle a class-action lawsuit over the same issue, paying out $25 per iPhone, with the total capped at $310m. "We have never -- and would never -- do anything to intentionally shorten the life of any Apple product or degrade the user experience to drive customer upgrades," Apple said in a statement on Thursday. "Our goal has always been to create products that our customers love, and making iPhones last as long as possible is an important part of that."
This latest UK-based multimillion-pound legal claim has been launched by Justin Gutmann, a consumer rights campaigner, and alleges that Apple deliberately misled users, and rather than roll out a battery recall or replacement program; the company instead pushed out this feature to cover up the fact that older iPhone batteries were not able to cope with the new power demands put on them.
Apple did eventually roll out a $29 battery replacement program, a program that saw the company carry out 11 million battery replacements in 2018, compared to the 1 to 2 million that would normally be carried out in a year. This resulted in Apple issuing a profit warning in January 2019, the company's first since 2002. If Apple loses, the company could be forced to pay damages of more than $950m to the 25 million people who purchased affected iPhones. Following the US settlement in March 2020, Apple agreed to settle a class-action lawsuit over the same issue, paying out $25 per iPhone, with the total capped at $310m. "We have never -- and would never -- do anything to intentionally shorten the life of any Apple product or degrade the user experience to drive customer upgrades," Apple said in a statement on Thursday. "Our goal has always been to create products that our customers love, and making iPhones last as long as possible is an important part of that."
Re: (Score:2)
"We have never -- and would never -- do anything to intentionally shorten the life of any Apple product or degrade the user experience to drive customer upgrades," Apple said
LMAO. Way to put your foot in your mouth there Apple!
That very quote is still in my clipboard, from whence I was ready to paste it into my comment. I was about to point out that that was a pretty rich thing to say, coming from a company that pioneered gluing phones together, eliminating battery replaceability, and getting rid of the audio jack so as to force purchase of an ungainly barnacle of an adapter.
I hope this suit succeeds. Sadly, it's not enough to hurt Apple, but it represents a large and heartily extended middle finger in opposition to the Kool-Aid
Re: Apple is the new Microsoft... (Score:2)
Apple issuing updates that slow down the phone, and creating a proprietary interconnect where the first part to wear out is the most expensive part, totally isn't planned obsolescence
Re: (Score:2)
So, what exactly is everyone mad at Apple for? Better to have a slower old iPhone than one that you cant do anything intense on for fear of it rebooting or just
Re: (Score:2)
So, what exactly is everyone mad at Apple for? Better to have a slower old iPhone than one that you cant do anything intense on for fear of it rebooting or just powering off like a desktop unplugged, right?
For (1) not being transparent with what it was doing and (2) not allowing the user to decide which option (longer battery life or better performance) was better for that user.
It also didn't help Apple's image that the ostensibly benevolent thing happened to nudge users into buying new, expensive phones. Oh, and if there really was no way to keep the old phone running without significantly degrading performance, then the claim of eternally supporting old phones with OS upgrades should have a huge asterisk n
Re: Apple is the new Microsoft... (Score:2)
When exactly did they claim that? Be specific.
Re: (Score:2)
For (1) not being transparent with what it was doing and (2) not allowing the user to decide which option (longer battery life or better performance) was better for that user.
It only throttles when the battery can't supply enough power to keep the CPU on. The only possible options here are "Slow down CPU" or "Turn everything off". There's no room for an option here unless you think your phone suddenly powering off when you try to do something is a good thing. I doubt many people would agree with you on that.
Oh, and if there really was no way to keep the old phone running without significantly degrading performance, then the claim of eternally supporting old phones with OS upgrades should have a huge asterisk next to it.
There's a basic level of tech knowledge assumed here. A phone is just another computer. By now most people are aware that if you run the latest software on an old computer, i
Re: Apple is the new Microsoft... (Score:2)
It only throttles when the battery can't supply enough power to keep the CPU on.
If that was really the case, then the battery would be in such bad shape that it wouldn't last long even with throttling. Either that or apple really cheaped out on the battery, which might be believable given how notoriously failure prone iphone batteries are, especially once you consider that non removable batteries are yet another form of planned obsolescence.
You're an idiot if you think Apple doesn't do this, by the way. The number one reason to be hostile against phone repairs is because phone repairs
Re: (Score:2)
I definitely think Apple should have done it better, like give you the option of letting the CPU throttle or showing you how many times in the last so many days the CPU was capped to keep the unit powered, but not doing anything would have just let the units power clip during intense use and that would have been the worst for keeping units around.
So, what exactly is everyone mad at Apple for? Better to have a slower old iPhone than one that you cant do anything intense on for fear of it rebooting or just powering off like a desktop unplugged, right?
They included all those features and a couple of graphs in the next version of the Battery pane in "Settings". I honestly think they didn't think the momentary Throttling would even be humanly-noticeable; but then it got blown up into this big "Apple is Forcing Us to Buy New Phonezzzz!!" Bullshit.
Did anyone ever point out that all one really had to do was replace their phone battery (which Apple will do at basically Cost), and the Throttling would instantly cease for another few years?
I guess Apple could ha
Re: (Score:2)
Apple issuing updates that slow down the phone, and creating a proprietary interconnect where the first part to wear out is the most expensive part, totally isn't planned obsolescence
Microsoft, in it's deepest, most lurid dreams never even considered being as customer unfriendly as Apple.
Microsoft is all those things you mentioned and more, but to their credit as long as you were using MS products, you got support and a lot of the time, features you wanted. Above all else, you could do what you liked on a Microsoft OS/product so if it didn't do what you wanted or in the way you wanted, you could install something to do/change it.
Re: (Score:2)
Lying thru their teeth? (Score:1)
um wtf.
Last line
"We have never -- and would never -- do anything to intentionally shorten the life of any Apple product.
First Line
"Batterygate" refers to a 2016/17 scandal where Apple added an undocumented battery throttling capabilities
Re: (Score:2)
Nono! You misunderstand! That was to *extend* the life of the phone and battery!
By making it really slow and buggy! Uhm. I mean. By... Reducing the power draw. Yes. Reducing the power draw, that's what I meant to say. Nothing to do with performance or crashes. At all.
Re:Lying thru their teeth? (Score:4, Insightful)
Re: (Score:2)
Re:Lying thru their teeth? (Score:4, Informative)
The throttling kept the phone running when the battery wasn't capable of providing enough power for normal operations. The alternative is the phone just shuts off when you try to use it. It's extending the life of the phone.
Re: (Score:2, Troll)
Re: (Score:2)
Modern Android phones do it too.
Laptops have been throttling the CPU for a LONG time. Have you ever looked at the spec sheet for a mobile Intel CPU? They've got a fairly low base clock rate, and multiple levels of boost speed that they don't actually promise. The boosts are only for short bursts, and only if both the cooling + battery can sustain it. Ultraportable laptops very rarely run the CPU anywhere near the max speed - the smallest ones rarely ever reach max speed. Intel's main selling point for their
Re: (Score:2)
Yeah, exactly. It's why every single device ever that has lithium ion batteries get these updates, for this exact reason.
Right? Right???
Wait.... no, This isn't an issue on literally ANY other device. Not Android phones, Gameboys, Macbook Pros, Windows laptops, etc... Only newer iPhones at the time had this problem. And hasn't happened since, there hasn't been an issue like it since.
Wanna bet?
Re: (Score:2)
No. Litiium Ion batteries dont drop voltage like that. The kind of battery technology that did that, has never been used in iPhones.
Re: (Score:2)
No. Litiium Ion batteries dont drop voltage like that. The kind of battery technology that did that, has never been used in iPhones.
Really?
Ohm's Law says you are full of it.
Re: (Score:2)
What does Ohms law have to do with the power curve of batteries?
The modern day batteries have been designed to keep a consistent high voltage and amp for as long as possible, and then collapse fast at the end of it. And that curve is played out every single day as it loses power. Over time it can't get as full, but even if it is 5 years old and only have 25% power left, it can still run the device almost as well as it could at new at around 25% full. Using less power might extend battery life when on low po
Re: (Score:2)
What does Ohms law have to do with the power curve of batteries?
The modern day batteries have been designed to keep a consistent high voltage and amp for as long as possible, and then collapse fast at the end of it. And that curve is played out every single day as it loses power. Over time it can't get as full, but even if it is 5 years old and only have 25% power left, it can still run the device almost as well as it could at new at around 25% full. Using less power might extend battery life when on low power, but it doesn't make it run when it otherwise wouldn't ;)
Yes, yes it does. Here's why:
Disregarding cold temperature issues (which sort of acts like an old battery, too), Internal resistance rises in older batteries. That's why they can't produce enough current; so, when asked to do something that requires more current (with an old battery), the voltage (temporarily) collapses. That's why Ohm's Law applies. And when this happens, the Device, starved for voltage, crashes.
What else did you think Apple was trying to avoid?
Re: (Score:2)
The issue is that Apple didn't make buyers aware that after a few years their phone would get extremely slow and require a costly repair, by design. Most other phone manufacturers are guilty of that too.
Re: (Score:2)
The issue is that Apple didn't make buyers aware that after a few years their phone would get extremely slow and require a costly repair, by design. Most other phone manufacturers are guilty of that too.
Costly?
You spend $1k on a phone and then think that $50 or $70 to replace the battery with a genuine OEM part using OEM repair facilities, personnel and equipment after 3 or 4 years is "costly"?
Well, alrighty then!
https://support.apple.com/ipho... [apple.com]
Re: (Score:2)
Out of warranty it's £70 in the UK. iPhones start at £420.
I'm sure they were not losing money when they offered to do it for £30. In my book this puts them on a par with HP's prices for printer ink, profiteering.
Re: (Score:2)
Out of warranty it's £70 in the UK. iPhones start at £420.
I'm sure they were not losing money when they offered to do it for £30. In my book this puts them on a par with HP's prices for printer ink, profiteering.
Would you like to Post that without resorting to Unicode?
Re: (Score:2)
I type the Pound sign on my keyboard, Slashdot screws it up.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]
Summary totally blew it (Score:4, Informative)
It also came with unexpected side effects, causing handsets to reboot in cold weather or when the battery's charge level was low.
The throttling was the fix for those problems. They weren't side effects.
Re: (Score:2)
The actual fix would've been to actually release a version of the OS that would still run normally on those phones.
Re:Summary totally blew it (Score:5, Informative)
It ran normally unless your battery couldn't supply enough power to run the CPU at full speed. Once you're in that scenario, your only options are to slow things down to reduce power draw, or shut down completely.
Re: (Score:2)
It ran normally unless your battery couldn't supply enough power to run the CPU at full speed. Once you're in that scenario, your only options are to slow things down to reduce power draw, or shut down completely.
It ran slower once you got the update, whether your battery was tired or not (because maybe you took good care of it by short-cycling and slow-charging it.) Once you're in that scenario you're right, but they were in that scenario because they skimped on battery discharge rate in a way that didn't take aging into account. Either they failed at projecting battery degradation, or they knew that the battery would degraded before the devices failed. Either way, it was planned obsolescence. Their "fix" only prov
Re: (Score:2)
Either they failed at projecting battery degradation
The batteries lasted beyond the warranty period.
or they knew that the battery would degraded before the devices failed.
Battery failure = device failure. They were trying to keep your device working right for longer out of warranty with a battery that lost its ability to provide sufficient current to a device that was at max tilt.
Re: (Score:2)
The batteries lasted beyond the warranty period.
This is not a satisfactory lifespan for a device where it's a PITA and/or expensive to replace the batteries. The biosphere cannot sustain a throwaway culture.
Re: (Score:2)
The batteries lasted beyond the warranty period.
This is not a satisfactory lifespan for a device where it's a PITA and/or expensive to replace the batteries. The biosphere cannot sustain a throwaway culture.
$50 for OEM battery replacement on any phone likely to need it (or $70 if your phone is really too new to need a new battery) is like complaining that you have to change the oil in your car for $40 every 15,000 miles.
https://support.apple.com/ipho... [apple.com]
Until someone comes up with an energy-storage technology that lasts forever, and is practical fir a handheld device, I think that Apple is more than compliant with battery lifetime, and very reasonable with replacement costs ($50) and covered models (back to iPh
Re: (Score:2)
It would seem reasonable if you didn't know that even most cheap android phones will work for years. I've got practically antique Motos that are still working fine.
Re: (Score:2)
It would seem reasonable if you didn't know that even most cheap android phones will work for years. I've got practically antique Motos that are still working fine.
Still seems reasonable.
And I'm sure you have other Android phones that needed new batteries; so now what?
Re: (Score:2)
And I'm sure you have other Android phones that needed new batteries; so now what?
The only Android devices I've ever had to replace the batteries on have been tablets. Nook Simple Touch and Nexus 7. I need to do them both again because I didn't use good enough batteries, but that's on me. Literally none of my Android phones have ever stopped working. One did come apart, without the battery swelling mind, and it still works too. Fucking adhesive bullshit.
Re: (Score:2)
This is not a satisfactory lifespan for a device where it's a PITA and/or expensive to replace the batteries. The biosphere cannot sustain a throwaway culture.
For most users, iPhone degrade to only holding 80% of their original charge after 3-4 years. Most people replace their phone every 2-3 years. For the vast majority of people, the tech in the phone is obsolete long before the battery becomes unusable.
Re:Summary totally blew it (Score:4, Insightful)
It ran slower once you got the update, whether your battery was tired or not (because maybe you took good care of it by short-cycling and slow-charging it.) Once you're in that scenario you're right, but they were in that scenario because they skimped on battery discharge rate in a way that didn't take aging into account. Either they failed at projecting battery degradation, or they knew that the battery would degraded before the devices failed. Either way, it was planned obsolescence. Their "fix" only proved that their design was either a failure, or consumer-hostile; either one puts the lie to their claims of user-friendliness.
The update was a safety that did nothing under normal scenarios. It's a failsafe feature. The vast majority of the problems this was designed to deal with fell into one of two cases:
1) You used the phone outdoors in winter weather. Lithium batteries don't work well when they're cold. I personally ran into the issue a lot when I was walking outdoors when the temperature was below freezing. Keeping Google Maps up, with the screen, GPS, data, and audio potentially going simultaneously was enough to push the power draw over the threshold. It even happened when the phone was brand new. Even a brand new battery couldn't supply enough power if it was cold enough.
2) You did too many things at once. With a brand new battery and ideal temperatures, the max power output of the battery was enough for normal use cases, but not enough to meet the maximum potential draw of the device. If managed to use enough features at once, you could overload the battery. Record video with intense filters enabled with driving directions on and Netflix overlaid on top of what you're doing, all over a 5G cell connection kind of scenarios. Stress levels that the vast majority of people won't come close to encountering.
Battery age could cause the throttling, but you'd have to abuse the hell out of the battery for years to get to that point. Most people are replacing the phone long long before the battery can cause throttling issues.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
If they just made it easy to replace the battery then people wouldn't be upset if a message popped up saying "your battery is knackered, replace it to restore performance."
If your battery cannot be replaced by the user, and requires them to give you their phone for days or weeks, as well as a heft chunk of change, it bloody well better last the lifetime of the device.
Re: (Score:2)
If they just made it easy to replace the battery then people wouldn't be upset if a message popped up saying "your battery is knackered, replace it to restore performance."
If your battery cannot be replaced by the user, and requires them to give you their phone for days or weeks, as well as a heft chunk of change, it bloody well better last the lifetime of the device.
Apple says mostly they can replace your battery while you wait at an Apple Store, and 3-5 days if it has to be mailed. They will even send you a mailer in case you don't live handy to a store. $6.95 shipping.
https://support.apple.com/ipho... [apple.com]
Plus, you have to live in the middle of nowhere to not have a third-party cellphone repair facility that can replace that battery in an hour or two with a Chinese knockoff and charge you more than twice what Apple charges.
Seriously: You are complaining about taking your
Re: (Score:2)
If they can fix it while you wait in store then the £70 they charge here is even more of a rip off. The fact that they go out of their way to stop third parties replacing the battery cheaper, and it took state level legal action to force them to even offer an official way to do it, says a lot.
Re: (Score:2)
If they can fix it while you wait in store then the £70 they charge here is even more of a rip off. The fact that they go out of their way to stop third parties replacing the battery cheaper, and it took state level legal action to force them to even offer an official way to do it, says a lot.
When did Apple stop third parties from blah blah?
Re: (Score:2)
If your battery cannot be replaced by the user, and requires them to give you their phone for days or weeks, as well as a heft chunk of change, it bloody well better last the lifetime of the device.
Getting the battery replaced takes under an hour. You go to the store, sign in, tell them what you're there for, and they tell you how long the wait is and text you when your turn in line is coming up. You hand them the phone and they tell you to come back in about 45 minutes. They make it as painless as could be.
Re: (Score:1)
The actual fix would've been to actually release a version of the OS that would still run normally on those phones.
They did. And got excoriated for it.
BTW, WTF is the civil Statute of Limitations in the U.K? This suit would be untimely in most, if not all, places in the U.S.
Re: (Score:2)
The actual fix would've been to actually release a version of the OS that would still run normally on those phones.
I.e. Crashed the whole system? They did. They made the throttling a toggle setting in the Settings app, allowing you to see your device spontaneously crash under some circumstances, rather than throttling down in a reasonable manner so you could keep using it. Meanwhile, those of us with devices too old to support throttling had no choice, so any time I was low on charge and got linked to a page that loaded a few too many ads, I could count on my device suddenly shutting down. I’d have loved the throt
Where are the payments from the first lawsuit? (Score:2)
Still waiting for them! :(
please stop apologizing (Score:2, Insightful)
And having worked on phone power management circuit design, yes, the phone's processors can switch back down fast enough when the power cord is pulled.
There is simply no other explanation than malice or incompetence, and in the latter case they
Re: (Score:2)
I don't know why people are apologizing this action by Apple. I've said it before and I'll say it again, if the throttling is to prevent abrupt shut downs, why is it still done on a phone with a battery that needs it whilst such a device is connected to a charger?
And having worked on phone power management circuit design, yes, the phone's processors can switch back down fast enough when the power cord is pulled.
There is simply no other explanation than malice or incompetence, and in the latter case they could have put out another bugfix. Which they haven't.
You are an imbecile.
Re: (Score:2)