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posted by Fnord666 on Tuesday December 03 2019, @08:18AM   Printer-friendly
from the butterfly-effect dept.

Submitted via IRC for Bytram

Judge says class action over Apple's MacBook butterfly keyboards can continue

A federal judge in California rejected Apple's request to dismiss a class action lawsuit from customers who said it failed to address issues with the "butterfly" keyboard on its MacBook laptops.

In a ruling Monday, US District Judge Edward Davila wrote that upset MacBook customers could continue their lawsuit in part because Apple's attempted fixes over the years and further repair programs for the keyboards were possible signs it didn't provide an "effective fix" for the devices.

The ongoing suit is the latest ding for Apple's new laptop keyboards. The butterfly keyboards, as they were called, were announced alongside Apple's newest laptops in 2015, promising a thinner, yet still effective design. They were named butterfly because of how they worked. (You can watch Apple's video about that here.)

[...] Apple attempted to have the suit dismissed, claiming in part that the customers (called "plaintiffs" in court-speak) hadn't participated in its repair programs and thus couldn't prove it didn't do enough to fix their laptops.

"Plaintiffs sufficiently allege they have suffered an injury-in-fact: Apple's alleged failure to repair the defective keyboards, including through the Program, has caused a concrete, particularized, and actual injury to each Plaintiff," Davila wrote in the opinion, earlier reported on by Reuters. "Plaintiffs sufficiently plead that the Program is ineffective in remedying the allegedly defective design of the butterfly keyboards."

The judge was careful to add, however, he wasn't issuing a ruling on the actual case Monday. He was just allowing it to move forward despite Apple's objections.

Benjamin Johns, a lawyer representing the customers, said in a statement that he was pleased the court allowed the suit to continue. Apple didn't immediately respond to a request for comment.


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  • (Score: 2) by Immerman on Tuesday December 03 2019, @07:34PM

    by Immerman (3985) on Tuesday December 03 2019, @07:34PM (#927779)

    That they are, which helps your laptop double as a personal defense weapon. Who needs pepper spray? (Though in fairness I think that had more to do with the giant steel back-plate than the switches themselves)

    Humorously, one of my first PCs was actually a hand-me-down green-screen "luggable" - I don't recall if it actually had buckling spring keys, but given the era it seems likely. Of course, if you were able to actually get that thing moving fast enough to hit someone, I think it'd be a clear case of attempted murder rather than self defense.

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