Lawsuit claims iOS 14 battery drain bug is example of planned obsolescence

Authored by appleinsider.com and submitted by kry_some_more

Apple has been hit with a lawsuit claiming that recent iOS software updates "damaged iPhones by dramatically lowing processing speeds and battery life."

The lawsuit claims that a slew of users have been reporting problems with iOS 14.5, iOS 14.5.1, and iOS 14.6 related to performance throttling and battery drain.

More specifically, the complaint attempts to draw a connection between battery drain and performance bugs and allegations of planned obsolescence.

"Apple benefits from not having to tell existing and prospective iPhone users that updates touted to add desirable features and to fix security and other bugs have a significant countervailing downside in the form of decreased processing speed and battery life," the complaint reads.

The lawsuit alleges that "degrading device performance ahead of product launches may also allow Apple to drum up demand for faster phones with longer battery life."

Essentially, the lawsuit alleges that Apple is ostensibly trying to trick users into downloading software updates so that it can slow down iPhones in an attempt to get users to buy new ones.

The complaint, which seeks class status, asks for an enjoinment on the alleged practices and damages.

Interestingly, the lawsuit says that users cannot individually download an update's security patches without downloading the entire update. Apple recently announced that it would change that behavior at WWDC 2021.

Follow all of WWDC 2021 with comprehensive AppleInsider coverage of the week-long event from June 7 through June 11, including details on iOS 15, iPadOS 15, watchOS 8, macOS Monterey and more.

broccolisprout on June 8th, 2021 at 13:00 UTC »

Reset the network settings

This solves it for my first edition iPhone SE. Has to be done after every update though.

dolphin37 on June 8th, 2021 at 07:49 UTC »

I thought apple already admitted this years ago? But tried to defend it by saying it’s just limitations of their battery technology that they ‘plan’ around in advance of them actually dying

My old iPhone has had wifi disabled on it and I can’t use it unless it’s on charge lol

autotldr on June 8th, 2021 at 06:00 UTC »

This is the best tl;dr I could make, original reduced by 74%. (I'm a bot)

Apple has been hit with a lawsuit claiming that recent iOS software updates "Damaged iPhones by dramatically lowing processing speeds and battery life."

The lawsuit claims that a slew of users have been reporting problems with iOS 14.5, iOS 14.5.1, and iOS 14.6 related to performance throttling and battery drain.

The lawsuit alleges that "Degrading device performance ahead of product launches may also allow Apple to drum up demand for faster phones with longer battery life."

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