Apple wins trial over FaceTime bug

Recently there was a strong controversy due to a bug in FaceTime allowing you to hear the person you were calling without the need for the other party to have accepted the call, this programming error by Apple was so serious that even group FaceTime calls were disabled for a long time.

A Houston attorney sued Apple over this bug because it theoretically affected their work, but Apple has won the lawsuit. The umpteenth time someone sues Apple with the intention of making a profit, being an Apple lawyer has to be the best job in the world.

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The lawyer Larry Williams II filed the lawsuit during the month of January of this year 2019, just a few days after the FaceTime bug was discovered. However, it was last May 9 when the court dismissed the case, favoring the Cupertino company, so it has not estimated the arguments of Williams II, which pointed out that this bug was extremely dangerous without a compelling reason for it to have happened. In short, it seems that this time "he has not sneaked in."

Williams has argued during the trial that this bug has endangered the privacy of his clients, for which he has claimed damages derived from the negligence committed by the Cupertino company, and that is that according to him, some user has been able to access the conversations that he himself may have had with some of his clients, putting his defense at risk. Ultimately, this bug has been fixed and it seems that no "bullies" has been able to bathe in gold taking advantage of one of those peculiar demands that are usually the order of the day in the United States of America.


FaceTime call
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