Corsair RAM Lawsuit: Why Overclocking Speeds Led to a $5.5M Settlement
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7 Articles
Corsair Loses Lawsuit Over XMP Memory Speeds: U.S. Buyers of Overclocked RAM Kits from 2018-2025 May Get Paid
Corsair Loses Lawsuit Over XMP Memory Speeds: U.S. Buyers of Overclocked RAM Kits from 2018-2025 May Get Paid corsair Loses Lawsuit Over XMP Memory Speeds: U.S. Buyers of Overclocked RAM Kits from 2018-2025 May Get paid Are you a U.S. buyer who purchased Corsair XMP-certified memory (RAM) kits as 2018? If so, you might be eligible for compensation. In recent news shaking the PC hardware community, Corsair, one of the world’s top manufact…
Corsair RAM Lawsuit: Why Overclocking Speeds Led to a $5.5M Settlement
In 2022, Corsair was named in a class-action lawsuit alleging misleading marketing of its Vengeance and Dominator DDR4/DDR5 desktop memory modules. The complaint stated that Corsair prominently advertised high speeds such as DDR4-3600 or DDR5-6400 without making it clear that these numbers referred to overclocking ...
In the USA, Corsair is supposed to agree on a settlement after three years of litigation. Consumers complained that the information on clock frequency was misleading.
News extracted from HD Technology. Visit www.hd-tecnologia.com for the latest news. Corsair faces the consequences of a collective lawsuit for misleading advertising in his DDR4 and DDR5 memoirs, after having promoted overclock speeds as if they were standard frequencies. The complaint, filed in 2022, finally advanced in US justice, and the agreement provides for economic compensation for buyers in the US between 2018 and 2025. Conflict, memory …
The manufacturer CORSAIR has just agreed to a $5.5 million financial agreement to put an end to a collective action in the United States. The case dates back to 2022, when a complaint in California denounced an advertising deemed misleading around the Vengeance and Dominator memory modules. The latter were sold with posted speeds of [...] The CORSAIR article sentenced to pay $5.5 million after a complaint about its RAM appeared first on Hardware…
CORSAIR has been forced to put on the table a millionaire deal after several years of litigation over a lawsuit over the way he promoted his RAM. It all started in 2022 with a collective lawsuit in California, in which the company was accused of selling Vengeance and Dominator series modules with speeds like 3,200 or 3,600 MHz, when in fact they started from factory to the 2,133 MHz standard that marks the JEDEC. As we know, to reach the figures…
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