
Titleist Golf Balls
Lawsuit accuses company of duping consumers into buying “unwanted” golf balls.
February 2020: The Court granted final approval of the settlement agreement.
October 2019: The Court granted preliminary approval of a class-action settlement that would provide class members with a cash award based on the number of CPUs they purchased. (Class members without proof of purchase are limited to receiving awards for no more than five purchases.) A final fairness hearing is scheduled for February 20, 2020. For more information, go to https://www.amdcpusettlement.com/.
October 2015: A class-action lawsuit was filed against Advanced Micro Devices, Inc. for allegedly misrepresenting the specifications of its Bulldozer line of CPUs. Specifically, plaintiffs claim that the company misleadingly represents that the Bulldozer CPU has eight cores when, according to plaintiffs, it functions as a four core CPU. (A core is an independent processing unit that performs one calculation at a time. Because each core is able to operate independently from the others, a CPU containing multiple cores can perform multiple tasks at the same time. Thus, an eight-core CPU can perform eight tasks at once.) (Plaintiffs filed an amended complaint in 2017.) (Dickey et al v. Advanced Micro Devices, Inc., Case No. 15-cv-4922, N.D. Cal.)
Lawsuit accuses company of duping consumers into buying “unwanted” golf balls.
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