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posted by martyb on Friday October 04 2019, @06:49PM   Printer-friendly
from the we-don't-have-to-tell-you-we-cheated dept.

If You Owned the Samsung Galaxy S4, You're Entitled to Some Cold, Hard Cash

We never thought we'd be writing about the Samsung Galaxy S4 again — but Samsung has just settled a lawsuit over false benchmarks on the now six-year-old device. The lawsuit was settled for $13.4 million.

According to The Register, the lawsuit was first filed in November 2014 by Daniel Norcia, after it was found that Samsung was artificially inflating benchmark scores by introducing code that detected when benchmarks were running and then overclocking the Qualcomm Snapdragon 600 processor speed to 532MHz, instead of the 480MHz that the processor normally ran at.

Samsung never denied that it inflated benchmark scores, instead taking a different approach. The company argued that under California law, it was not "legally obliged" to disclose that the phone was set up to inflate scores. Instead, the company argued that only security issues and data breaches need to be disclosed to the public. The case made its way all the way up to the Supreme Court, and was set to go to trial before Samsung finally settled for $13.4 million.

As part of the settlement, Samsung has agreed not to inflate software that artificially increases benchmark tests — but interestingly, it only agreed to do so until 2024. Not only that, but the company is not required to admit any wrongdoing.

Source: https://www.digitaltrends.com/mobile/samsung-galaxy-s4-benchmark-inflation-settlement/


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  • (Score: 1, Informative) by Anonymous Coward on Friday October 04 2019, @08:01PM (2 children)

    by Anonymous Coward on Friday October 04 2019, @08:01PM (#902764)

    Those are mostly zinc. The zinc is potentially more valuable than the face value of the pennies though.

    As of this writing, the current prices of zinc and copper on the london metal exchange is 2324 USD / tonne and 5626 USD / tonne, respectively.

    A US penny is 2.5g so 1 tonne of pennies has a face value of 4000 USD, containing 975kg of zinc and 25 kg of copper. That's worth about 2400 USD, ignoring the cost of separating the metals.

    The zinc is not even remotely close to being worth more than the face value of the pennies.

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  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Friday October 04 2019, @08:14PM (1 child)

    by Anonymous Coward on Friday October 04 2019, @08:14PM (#902776)

    If you have a tonne of pennies older than 1982 the situation is very different, the 1962-1982 US pennies were 3.1g, 95% copper and 5% zinc, so the face value of those pennies is about 3200 USD and the metals after separation would be worth about 5100 USD.

    • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Friday October 04 2019, @08:21PM

      by Anonymous Coward on Friday October 04 2019, @08:21PM (#902779)

      Er, I fat fingered my calculator, the value of the metals in one-tonne of pre-1982 pennies, based on the above LME prices, is about 5500 USD.