Amid ongoing pressure to address claims that its SanDisk Extreme SSDs are still erasing data and becoming unmountable despite a firmware fix, Western Digital is facing a lawsuit over its storage drives.
Complaints about the drives littered SanDisk’s forums and Reddit (examples here, here, here, and here) for at least four months before Western Digital released a firmware fix in late May.
Nathan Krum filed a lawsuit [PDF] against Western Digital in a federal court in San Jose, California, on Wednesday, as spotted by The Register.
The complaint says Western Digital “engaged in a scheme to mislead consumers” about Extreme and My Passport SSDs and that both series of drives are still defective after the firmware update, “according to reports from individuals who installed this fix.”
Western Digital’s current product page advertises Extreme drives as fit for photographers, and it’s pushed My Passport as suitable for creators and businesses.
The SMR and drive size scandals resulted in class-action lawsuits, with the former reportedly ending in a $2.7 million settlement and the latter with Western Digital compensating affected parties with free backup and recovery software worth $30.
This is the best summary I could come up with:
Amid ongoing pressure to address claims that its SanDisk Extreme SSDs are still erasing data and becoming unmountable despite a firmware fix, Western Digital is facing a lawsuit over its storage drives.
Complaints about the drives littered SanDisk’s forums and Reddit (examples here, here, here, and here) for at least four months before Western Digital released a firmware fix in late May.
Nathan Krum filed a lawsuit [PDF] against Western Digital in a federal court in San Jose, California, on Wednesday, as spotted by The Register.
The complaint says Western Digital “engaged in a scheme to mislead consumers” about Extreme and My Passport SSDs and that both series of drives are still defective after the firmware update, “according to reports from individuals who installed this fix.”
Western Digital’s current product page advertises Extreme drives as fit for photographers, and it’s pushed My Passport as suitable for creators and businesses.
The SMR and drive size scandals resulted in class-action lawsuits, with the former reportedly ending in a $2.7 million settlement and the latter with Western Digital compensating affected parties with free backup and recovery software worth $30.
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