I started a company Camel Sending financial compensation to its customers in the United States who were affected by the slowdown of their iPhones because they contained old batteries, according to a report by the Economic Times website.
This comes as a result of the company’s judicial settlement in 2020 after a class-action lawsuit in the United States that accused Apple of secretly slowing down some iPhone releases.
Under the settlement, Apple is obligated to pay about 500 million US dollars to its affected customers, and it has already begun sending compensation to customers who submitted claims to the company earlier.
According to the MacRoomers website, Apple sent its customers eligible for compensation a sum of money for each device proven to be damaged by its software updates. The website reported that its readers were among those who received payments of $92.17 per claim from Apple.
The lawsuit was filed in December 2017, shortly after Apple revealed that it reduced the maximum performance of some iPhone models by using “chemically aged” batteries when necessary to prevent the devices from shutting down unexpectedly.
Apple apologized for its lack of transparency and temporarily reduced the price of replacing iPhone batteries to $29 in 2018.
Apple has faced many lawsuits since 2017 after it officially acknowledged reducing the performance of some versions of iPhones that contain relatively old batteries to prevent the problem of sudden shutdowns in them, as the company introduced a new power management system in the iOS 10.2.1 update at that time without Clearly mention the changes that this update brings.
Although she apologized for the way she reported the change, she repeatedly denied all allegations and never admitted to any legal wrongdoing. Apple said it agreed to the settlement only “to avoid burdensome and costly litigation.”