Judge dismisses potential new ‘flexgate’ lawsuit against Apple
A judge said Apple had no duty to disclose the flaw.
What you need to know
Apple won’t face another lawsuit over ‘flexgate’.
A judge has dismissed an appeal seeking to revive a class action lawsuit.
Apple was sued over cables in its MacBook that were too short and would eventually fail.
Apple will not face a fresh ‘flexgate’ lawsuit after a judge dismissed an appeal seeking to revive the case.
As reported by Bloomberg Law:
Apple defeated an appeal to revive a would-be class action over allegedly defective MacBook Pro displays, after the Ninth Circuit said Thursday that the company had no duty to disclose the flaw.
Apple was sued in 2020 by a class-action group claiming the company knew that its MacBook Pro had a flawed design from 2016 onwards where the cables were too short, eventually causing them to fail:
The lawsuit alleged that MacBook Pro models released after 2016 were designed with cables that are too short and eventually fail with ordinary wear and tear. The plaintiffs claimed violations California’s Consumer Legal Remedies Act and Unfair Competition Law.
The lawsuit also alleged fraudulent concealment under a common law theory, and violations of deceptive trade statutes in Washington, Florida, New Jersey, Michigan, Alaska, Missouri, Massachusetts, and Texas.
With the appeal defeated, Apple will not face a class-action lawsuit in the case.
A teardown of Apple’s new best MacBook, the 2021 model, revealed last year that Apple had replaced the culprit cables with new ones that had 100% more slack, hopefully putting ‘flexgate’ to bed once and for all.
Powerful computing for all
14-inch MacBook Pro (2021)
The newest and best
The 14-inch MacBook Pro (2021) comes with an M1 Pro or M1 Max SoC that’s fast, secure, and available with the most memory and storage options. Did we mention that incredible display and that it comes with MagSafe?!