‘Useless’ Computers? Lawsuit Claims HP Laptop Hinges Break Easily Due to Defect [UPDATE]
A proposed class action filed late last week claims the hinges in certain HP laptops are defectively designed and can break after only months of use.
A proposed class action filed late last week claims the hinges in certain HP laptops are defectively designed and can break after only months of use.
Six models of Vizio OLED and LED 4K UHD flat-screen televisions are defective in that they suffer from repeated and unexpected power failures, a proposed class action claims.
Robinhood Markets, Inc. faces a proposed class action lawsuit in New York over its alleged failure to safeguard reams of confidential information belonging to millions of current and former users of the online stock trading platform.
A proposed class action filed this week claims Samsung’s Chromebook Plus 2-in-1 computers are plagued by a defect that can cause the laptop/tablet device’s hinges to break off and damage the screen.
A proposed class action alleges Canon U.S.A. has falsely advertised its All-in-One printers in that the products, touted as able to print, copy, scan and, in some cases, fax documents, are unable to scan or fax when their ink cartridges are low or empty.
McDonald’s has been hit with a proposed class action filed by three delivery customers who claim the fast food giant failed to protect their personal information from unauthorized access.
Apple has said it will pay $95 million to settle a proposed class action that alleged the tech heavyweight breached its contracts with some AppleCare customers by giving them remanufactured iPhone and iPad devices.
by Corrado Rizzi on Consumer Fraud
Apple’s top-of-the-line M1 MacBook Air and M1 MacBook Pro laptops come with screens that are “extraordinarily fragile,” and prone to crack, black out, show magenta, purple and blue lines and squares or otherwise stop working.
The parties handling more than a dozen lawsuits over widespread incidents of “Zoombombing” and unauthorized data sharing have agreed to a proposed $85 million settlement.
A proposed class action filed this week in California claims subscribers to HP’s “Instant Ink” program have received far less than they bargained for.