John Deere agrees to $99 million settlement in repair monopoly lawsuit

Farming equipment maker John Deere has agreed to pay $99 million to settle a class action lawsuit from customers. The suit alleged the company restricted access to repair tools for its tractors and other equipment, creating a monopoly in the repair market. The announcement came on Monday.

John Deere announced on Monday that it would pay $99 million to resolve the class action lawsuit filed by its customers. The plaintiffs accused the tractor manufacturer of blocking independent access to diagnostic tools and repair services for its farming equipment. This practice, they claimed, forced farmers to rely solely on authorized dealers, effectively giving John Deere control over repairs. The settlement addresses years of opposition from the company to right-to-repair initiatives, which aim to allow owners to fix their own products or use third-party services. Consumer advocates have welcomed the payout but argue it falls short of fully addressing the issues. No admission of wrongdoing was included in the agreement, as is common in such settlements. The case highlights ongoing tensions in the agriculture sector over equipment maintenance costs and independence for farmers.

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Federal judge approving $7.85M Sony PlayStation antitrust settlement in courtroom, with PS5 console, controllers, and store credits on bench.
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US court preliminarily approves $7.85 million Sony PlayStation digital games antitrust settlement

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A federal judge in the Northern District of California has granted preliminary approval to a $7.85 million class-action settlement against Sony Interactive Entertainment over alleged anticompetitive practices on the PlayStation Store. Eligible US PlayStation Network users who bought certain digital games or vouchers from April 1, 2019, to December 31, 2023, could receive automatic store credits or refunds, even if accounts are inactive (contact lawyers if former user). A final fairness hearing is set for October 15, 2026.

Google has reached a preliminary $135 million settlement in the class-action lawsuit Taylor v. Google LLC, which accused the company of transferring data from Android phones without users' permission, using cellular data. The agreement covers U.S. Android users with cellular plans from November 12, 2017, onward. A final approval hearing is set for June 23.

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Sony has reached a class action settlement worth $8 million for PlayStation gamers. The agreement offers a modest payout to eligible players and is part of a series of US and UK antitrust actions against the company.

A controversial bill in Colorado that sought to undo some state repair protections has failed. Right-to-repair advocates opposed the measure, seeing it as a test case for manufacturers' broader push against such laws across the US.

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The Federal Trade Commission announced Thursday that three marketing firms agreed to pay nearly $1 million to settle allegations of deception. Cox Media Group, MindSift LLC and 1010 Digital Works claimed their Active Listening service could target ads using audio from consumers’ smart devices. The FTC said the technology amounted to nothing more than costly email lists.

A US jury has ruled that Boeing bears no liability for revenue losses claimed by Polish airline LOT over the grounding of 737 MAX jets. LOT had sought $250 million and accused the company of fraud.

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