Judge approves iPod battery compensation

A Superior Court judge in San Mateo County, California, has given final approval to a settlement that will compensate iPod owners whose music players' batteries failed to hold a charge.

A preliminary settlement was reached in May. Under the terms of the deal, buyers of first- and second-generation iPods with battery issues who bought their iPods on or before May 31, 2004 can get either a US$25 check or US$50 in credit at an Apple Computer store in the US.

Those who bought third-generation iPods on or before May 31, 2004 can either get a US$50 credit or send their iPod back to Apple and have the battery fixed or get a replacement device.

People wishing to file a claim must have their paperwork postmarked by September 30. For extended warranty service on third-generation iPods, buyers have until September 30 or two years from the date they bought the iPod, whichever is later.

Additionally, customers who paid Apple to repair their first-, second- or third-generation iPod battery within two years of purchasing the device are eligible for a refund of half the cost of such repairs. Until recently, Apple charged US$99 for those fixes, though the company now offers service for US$59 via its Web site.

Under terms of the deal, battery failure is defined as a device whose battery charge has dropped to four hours or less of continuous play in third-generation iPods and five hours or less in first- and second-generation devices.

"This is a very good settlement in that it gives consumers with defective batteries what they need -- to have the battery of their iPods replaced, and in some cases the whole player," Steve Williams, one of the lawyers that brought the suit, said in a statement on the Web site of his firm, Cotchett, Pitre, Simon & McCarthy.

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Talkback 4 comments

  1. What about Aussie owners Rahul -- 29/08/05

    What about Aussie owners of the 3G iPod?

    Do we start our own class action?

  2. Ipod settlement fianlized Anonymous -- 30/08/05

    I see headlines on the above, but cannot determine when they will issue $50 store credit. If anyone knows this outcome, please advise.
    Thanks

  3. it's all a crock Anonymous -- 26/09/05

    I bought an iPod in 2003 and the battery heated up within 2 weeks of the purchase. I believe this is what fried my iPod, as well. You see, after buying the 400 dollar iPod, it continually had the check disk error. It only worked for about a month. The Mac store said that I would be better off just buying a new one! Oh, OK. I had your product for a month and now I should just purchase another since this one doesn't work. I don't thinks so. I tried calling apple and they basically said, "Too bad. you will have to buy a new one."
    So this lawsuit of giving me 50 dollars (which I have to spend at apple) is supposed to compensate me. Thanks a lot, apple. I won't be supporting you anymore.
    Oh, and this lawsuit is only for US customers. Their customer service stinks!

  4. iPod battery Anonymous -- 24/08/06

    When my iPod battery stopped holding a charge I took it to Apple and it was going to cost about half the price of just buying a new iPod. My friend told me about this website called http://www.laptopsforless.com/mp3playerbattery/apple-ipod-Battery and it was great. I got a new iPod battery and now my iPod works like it did out of the box. I would recommend the site if your iPod battery is failing.

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