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"Anyone who bought an iPhone 16, iPhone 15 Pro or Pro Max in the US between June 2024 and March 2025 could be eligible to receive a payment of up to $95 per device, according to the lawsuit. The estimated number of affected owners is 36 million."
"The US tech giant settled for $250m (£184m) in a US federal court in San Jose, California, over alleged false advertising for its Apple Intelligence suite of features. The lawsuit, filed by Peter Landsheft in 2024, arose after the iPhone maker announced - and started running advertisements for - a bevy of AI upgrades at its annual software developer conference in 2024, saying they would become available with new iPhones that autumn."
"Apple said it released numerous other artificial intelligence features since the launch of what it calls Apple Intelligence in 2024. "Apple has reached a settlement to resolve claims related to the availability of two additional features," the statement read. "We resolved this matter to stay focused on doing what we do best, delivering the most innovative products and services to our users.""
"In 2025, Apple said that the AI overhaul of Siri would not come until this year, and executives have now confirmed that the new Siri features will be unveiled at Apple's annual Worldwide Developer Conference (WWDC) next month."
Apple settled a class action lawsuit in US federal court in San Jose, California, involving alleged false advertising about Apple Intelligence features tied to Siri. The settlement totals $250 million and does not include an admission of fault by Apple. The claims stem from advertisements and announcements in 2024 that suggested AI upgrades would be available with new iPhones that autumn, but the iPhones launched without the promised features. Apple later said the Siri AI overhaul would not arrive until the following year, and executives confirmed the new Siri features will be unveiled at WWDC next month. Eligible buyers in the US between June 2024 and March 2025 may receive up to $95 per device, with an estimated 36 million affected owners. Approval from a judge is still required, and coverage outside the US is unknown.
Read at The Independent
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