“Some iPhone owners got a nasty surprise in February when, after bringing the device for repairs, they saw an ominous ‘Error 53’ message upon restarting their phones,” Jeff John Roberts reports for Fortune. “Translation: Your fancy gadget is now a glorified paperweight.
“Apple eventually issued a software fix that let people restore their device through iTunes, and apologized to users for the inconvenience,” Robert reports. “The company also said anyone who had paid out of pocket to address the issue could apply for a reimbursement.”
“But this is America so the story would not be complete without a class action lawsuit,” Robert reports. “On Monday, however, a judge in California threw out one of the cases on the grounds the iPhone users could not show they had been harmed.”
Read more in the full article here.
MacDailyNews Take: No harm, no foul.
SEE ALSO:
Apple apologizes to customers, updates iOS 9.2.1 to fix ‘Error 53’ iPhones – February 18, 2016
Apple is faces class action lawsuit over iPhone’s ‘Error 53’ – February 12, 2016
Error 53: Once again, Apple PR drops the ball – February 9, 2016
Apple under pressure as lawyers pledge action over ‘Error 53’ iPhones – February 9, 2016
‘Error 53’ fury mounts as Apple software update kills some iPhones ‘fixed’ by non-Apple repair shops – February 5, 2016