Seeger Weiss partner David Buchanan (Seeger Weiss) |
A public apology delivered by a Samsung Electronics CEO earlier this month and a software update are not enough to conciliate customers and soothe their anger, a US attorney has claimed, urging the tech giant to provide compensation.
Customers have been disappointed largely because Samsung sold devices that are not what they were meant to be and not as premium as they were promoted in terms of phone and battery performance, said David Buchanan, a partner at Seeger Weiss in New Jersey suing Samsung on behalf of three Samsung phone owners.
“The truth is that Samsung’s update and CEO Han Jong-hee’s statements in response to public outcry do nothing to redress the vast harm the company’s wrongful actions already inflicted on consumers,” Buchanan told The Korea Herald in an email interview.
“As a result of Samsung’s misrepresentations and concealments, consumers bought Samsung smartphones they would not have otherwise purchased and overpaid for premium characteristics they did not receive.”
Samsung co-Chief Executive Officer Han Jong-hee apologized during a shareholders meeting on March 16 over accusations that the smartphone maker had used a built-in app to regulate the device performance and had allegedly exempted benchmarking apps including GeekBench from throttling. Samsung also offered an update that enabled users of its latest Galaxy S22 series and Galaxy S8 Tab to turn off the built-in Game Optimizing Service app.
Lawyers for the three individuals, who bought Samsung S22 devices and other models, on March 11 filed a class action suit against Samsung in the US District Court in New Jersey, seeking an undisclosed amount in damages.
The New Jersey-based law firm accused Samsung of fraud and unjust enrichment, as well as violation of the consumer protection act in select states, among other claims, the filing showed.
Samsung Electronics is facing lawsuits at home too.
South Korean law firm A.Part, representing 1,885 Korean owners of Samsung devices who had not been aware of the performance-throttling app, filed a complaint Thursday with the Seoul Central District Court against Samsung on charges of violating the Act on Fair Labeling and Advertising and the Civil Act.
Each plaintiff is seeking 300,000 won ($246) in compensation per device he or she owns. The second batch of over 1,000 individuals is to file a similar suit in early April.
Though class and collective actions are not available in South Korea, Buchanan said he is open to discussion with the Korean lawyers representing thousands of Samsung phone owners.
“We would welcome a conversation with attorneys in Korea pursuing civil claims against Samsung,” he said.
“While the legal systems of our two countries are distinct, it appears that we share a common cause in holding Samsung accountable for its misrepresentations, deceptions, and omissions and seeking justice for consumers harmed by the company’s misconduct.”
In the class action suit, Seeger Weiss looks to take discovery, a US legal process to obtain evidence from parties, in order to require Samsung to turn over relevant documents about the full extent of the GOS throttling.
Buchanan said the litigation would prove that Samsung knowingly exempted popular benchmarking apps -- 3DMark, GeekBench, PCMark, GFXBench, Antutu, CPDT and Androbench -- from the throttling to create false perceptions regarding speed, performance and battery life.
Buchanan has represented individuals and corporations over cases ranging from pharmaceutical injury to product liability claims, trade secrets, commercial disputes, pension challenges, securities and investment fraud and consumer claims.
The legal challenges come after Samsung’s performance-rigging scandal erupted in Korean online communities when the Galaxy S22, S22+ and S22 Ultra variants started shipping in February.
Users in Korea claimed that Samsung’s GOS app -- designed to prevent overheating during long game play -- had been slowing down the performance of at least 10,000 apps, not limited to mobile games on flagship Galaxy S22 gadgets and their predecessors S10, S20, S21, as well as their variants like the Ultra and FE. They also claimed that Samsung’s One UI 4.0 update for mobile software customization discouraged users from opting out of running the built-in GOS app.
GeekBench, which measures the processor and memory performance of electronic devices to allow users to compare devices, has started delisting Samsung devices subject to the GOS app throttling from its table showing test results.
By Son Ji-hyoung (consnow@heraldcorp.com)