Court refuses to dismiss a lawsuit against Apple for allegedly disabling FaceTime on older iPhones

Court refuses to dismiss a lawsuit against Apple for allegedly disabling FaceTime on older iPhones

Reuters July 31, 2017, 23:07:32 IST

Apple Inc has failed in its bid to dismiss a lawsuit claiming it disabled the popular FaceTime feature on older iPhones to force users to upgrade.

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Court refuses to dismiss a lawsuit against Apple for allegedly disabling FaceTime on older iPhones

Apple Inc has failed in its bid to dismiss a lawsuit claiming it disabled the popular FaceTime video conferencing feature on older iPhones to force users to upgrade.

US District Judge Lucy Koh ruled late on Friday that iPhone 4 and 4S users can pursue nationwide class action claims that Apple intentionally “broke” FaceTime to save money from routing calls through servers owned by Akamai Technologies Inc.

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Representational image. Reuters

Neither Apple nor lawyers for the plaintiffs immediately responded on Monday to requests for comment.

Apple began using Akamai’s servers after losing a lawsuit in 2012 in which VirnetX Holding Corp claimed that FaceTime technology infringed its patents.

Testimony from a 2016 retrial, in that case, showed that Apple paid Akamai $50 million in one six-month period.

The plaintiffs said Apple eventually created a cheaper alternative for its iOS 7 operating system, and in April 2014 disabled FaceTime on iOS 6 and earlier systems.

Koh said the plaintiffs alleged some measurable loss to their phones’ value, and could try to show that Cupertino, California-based Apple’s conduct constituted a trespass and violated state consumer protection laws.

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The San Jose, California-based judge twice quoted from what the plaintiffs said was an Apple employee’s internal email characterizing iOS 6 users as “basically screwed” because of the disabling of FaceTime.

She also rejected Apple’s argument that the plaintiffs suffered no economic loss because FaceTime was a “free” service.

“FaceTime is a ‘feature’ of the iPhone and thus a component of the iPhone’s cost,” Koh said in a footnote. “Indeed, Apple advertised FaceTime as ‘one more thing that makes an iPhone an iPhone.’”

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The plaintiffs are led by Christina Grace of Marin County, California, and Ken Potter of San Diego County, California, who both owned the iPhone 4. Akamai was not named as a defendant.

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