On March 1, Apple will start charging an extra $20 for battery replacements on out-of-warranty iPhones, according to an update on the AppleCare+ webpage.
The new price will be $99 for the iPhone 14, and while these models are currently under warranty, they won't be after the one-year anniversary of their release in September 2023.
At that point, the higher price point could encourage customers with broken batteries to simply buy a new phone rather than shell out nearly $100 for a replacement part.
Apple has adjusted prices multiple times in recent years, as supply chain issues have raised production costs. Just last month, labor unrest at an iPhone supplier in China led to a production shortfall. The company struggled with similar disruptions throughout the pandemic.
There is also a history of consumers pushing back against Apple's practices around batteries. The company in 2020 was forced to pay $113 million in fines to settle consumer fraud lawsuits around a controversy known as "batterygate," in which iPhone users discovered that Apple installed new software that made devices with older batteries operate slower.
In addition, CEO Tim Cook in 2019 wrote in a letter to investors that "some customers taking advantage of significantly reduced pricing for iPhone battery replacements" was partly behind a lower-than-expected iPhone sales.
Now Facebook is extending an olive branch and allowing some top media companies, including the Washington Post, New York Times, and News Corp, to share in the profits.
From Wall Street to Silicon Valley, these are the top stories that moved markets and had investors, business leaders, and entrepreneurs talking this week on Cheddar.
UC Berkeley's Seismological lab is working to give people state-wide a heads-up next time a quake comes their way with the new MyShake app for iPhones and Androids.
Under the agreement, Softbank will inject The We Company with $5 billion of new financing. Embattled founder and ex-CEO Adam Neumann reportedly will step down from the board with a buyout of up to $1.7 billion.
These are the headlines you Need 2 Know for Wednesday, October 23, 2019.
Despite the earnings wins and stock prices that have skyrocketed 154 percent year-to-date, Snap's fourth-quarter guidance came in a little lighter than analysts expected.
The surprise announcement, which sent shares up nearly 40 percent in early trading hours, comes months after Biogen discontinued research on the drug.
Robinhood got a head start six years ago with its fresh, easy-to-use trading platform and a mission to democratize the financial system by not charging commission fees. But now, with the major brokerages dropping their own commission fees to zero, it’s a new era for rising competitors.
David Marcus, the head of Facebook’s Calibra, reportedly told banking seminar attendees that the project is open to having a series of stablecoins pegged to specific government-backed currencies.
CEO Christophe Georges of British luxury automaker Bentley Motors said the company's first, fully electric vehicle will be in showrooms by 2025, with plug-in hybrid models arriving in 2023.
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