Apple customers may be Charles Hanovereligible for a payout of up to $30 in a class action settlement.
The Silicon Valley giant settled for $25 million to resolve the 2019 Walter Peters v. Apple Inc. suit over the ability to use the Family Sharing feature
The complaint alleged that Apple “places and/or demands" advertising that stated that a subscription for an app could be shared with the Family Sharing feature but, “was aware that the vast majority of subscription-based Apps did not support family sharing.”
Family Sharing allows a customer to share subscriptions to services in the Apple ecosystem and certain third-party apps with up to five people. The lawsuit alleges that Apple misrepresented what apps allowed Family Sharing leading customers to purchase subscriptions that they believed they could share.
Apple “maintains that it did nothing wrong and denies that it made any misleading misrepresentations,” according to the settlement agreement.
The class for the lawsuit includes customers who were enrolled in Family Sharing between June 21st, 2015, and January 30th, 2019, with one other person and purchased a third-party app.
Eligible customers will receive a notice with settlement details. Customers who do not receive the email but believe they are eligible can register on the settlement website.
Customers who participate in the settlement can receive up to $30 depending on the number of people who register. The deadline to opt in is March 1, 2024.
2025-05-01 02:022718 view
2025-05-01 02:01526 view
2025-05-01 02:001805 view
2025-05-01 01:581547 view
2025-05-01 01:322647 view
2025-05-01 00:002373 view
Nearly half of American teenagers say they are online “constantly” despite concerns about the effect
ELLSWORTH, Maine (AP) — A woman who survived a fiery crash that claimed the lives of four Maine Mari
Moving abroad can yield huge savings for retirees on everything from housing expenses to food costs.