Apple introduced Wi-Fi Assist feature in iOS 9,
which allowed iOS devices to automatically use cellular connection when
the WiFi connection is poor. This feature ended up gobbling GBs of data
for many customers who were not familiar how the feature worked, this
is why Apple is facing a class-action lawsuit over Wi-Fi Assist feature
of iOS 9. Now in addition to this, Apple is now facing another lawsuit
over iPhone 5 and iPhone 5s automatically switching to LTE network from
Wi-Fi for AT&T subscribers.
Verizon
users were also experiencing the same data automatic switching to LTE
issue on iPhone 5 and iPhone 5s devices, but Apple had addressed the
issue with an Over-the-Air update back in September 2012. However the
issue persisted with iOS 6 and iOS 7 for the AT&T users and was only fixed with iOS 8.1 update back in October 2014, states Hagens Berman Sobol Shapiro LLP, the law firm.
The
law firm states that when a user stream a video over Wi-Fi network for
10-20 minutes on his iPhone 5 or iPhone 5s, the video compression
process is handled by the GPU and the CPU of A6 and A7 chips go into
sleep mode to save battery. This is when the both devices start
streaming the video over an LTE connection switching from WiFi network.
Verizon
didn’t charge its customers for crossing their data limit because of
this iOS bug, but AT&T did not wave off data overage charges for its
affected subscribers. Since Apple failed to informed its customers
about this automatic network switching, it violated the California
consumer laws, argues the law firm.
Are you one of such affected
iPhone 5 or iPhone 5s users? If you, you can be a part of this
class-action lawsuit by signing up here.
Via [MacRumors]
Apple facing a class action lawsuit for Data overage caused by iPhone 5s/5 WiFi defect

Reviewed by Unknown
Published:
Rating : 4.5
Published:
Rating : 4.5