Apple wins lawsuit claiming it misled users over Spectre and Meltdown security flaws

Judge rules Apple was not to blame

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A class-action lawsuit againstApplefor allegedly misleading customers regarding the notoious Spectre and Meltdown vulnerabilities has been dismissed.

Reutersreported U.S. District Judge Edward Davila, in San Jose, California, ruled that the plaintiffs did not prove Apple knew about the vulnerabilities and kept quiet, selling their products at inflated prices, as a result. They also failed to prove Apple provided security patches that significantly slowed down the performance of the devices.

Apple, as well as other tech giants, first reported discovering the two flaws in early 2018. The customers, who filed the class-action lawsuit at the time, claimed Apple knew about the flaws as early as June 2017, but kept quiet about it until aNew York Timesreport basically forced them to speak.

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Vague claims and affirmative misrepresentation

Vague claims and affirmative misrepresentation

But the judge says the plaintiffs failed to prove they relied on Apple’s marketing, when making their purchase choices. Apple’s claims that their devices were “secure” and “built withprivacyin mind” were too vague to support their claims. The judge also said that Apple’s claims of newer processors being faster than the older ones weren’t false, just because patches may have slowed them down.

“Plaintiffs have failed to allege an affirmative misrepresentation, an actionable omission, and actual reliance” on misstatements by Apple, Davila wrote.

The plaintiffs now have until June 30 to appeal the decision.

Apple says all Macs and iOS devices have been hit by Meltdown and Spectre>Spectre returns - Intel and ARM-based CPUs hit by serious vulnerability>Apple’s PC and mobile chips suffer from world-first data theft exploit

Spectre and Meltdown were two major vulnerabilities, discovered in early 2018, which allowed threat actors to read the contents of the memory in a vulnerableendpoint. Following up on the initial reports, researchers later discovered that practically all devices built in the last decade were vulnerable.

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It turned out to be one of the greatestvulnerabilitiesof all time.

To make matters even worse, many OEMs scrambled to get a fix out as soon as possible, pushing incomplete solutions that only slowed the devices down, and in some cases, even bricking them entirely.

Via:Reuters

Sead is a seasoned freelance journalist based in Sarajevo, Bosnia and Herzegovina. He writes about IT (cloud, IoT, 5G, VPN) and cybersecurity (ransomware, data breaches, laws and regulations). In his career, spanning more than a decade, he’s written for numerous media outlets, including Al Jazeera Balkans. He’s also held several modules on content writing for Represent Communications.

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