Best Buy Loses Laptop: Owner Sues... for $54 Million


Recommended Posts

54 million does sound a bit much. I guess she is trying to make a point......but....she really

needs to reexamine her thinking.....taking a computer to the "geek squad"

People who have never had to deal with identity theft have no idea of what can happen if this womans personal information falls into the wrong hands. Trying to deal with the big three credit monsters... I mean crdit bureaus can be frustrating to say the least. Speaking from experience I can tell you that after 3 years of writing letters, making phone calls and even getting a lawyer, I still have not totally fixed the problems created when my identity was stolen. And even now all it takes is one small incedent and I have to go though the whole process again. I wish her luck because quite frankly, she may have to use some of the money to establish a new identity for herself. It would be easier than fixing the old one. Best Buy's attitude needs to be changed and only a big dollar loss will do it.

The point being that for someone like that to carelessly loose a laptop like that, they should also compensate her for the machine, the agro of changing all her banking details/credit cards etc etc etc, replacing all the lost data etc. For example, not that i'd ever take my machine to one of those places, but if they lost my laptop and I didn't have a backup, I would want - nay I would *demand* at least ?50k compensation.

I agree with everything except 54 million. Bestbuy should get her a new laptop, compensate her for making her run around and take care of all expenditure if there is an identity theft and fix it free of charge. Lately there has been an attitude of oops you made a mistake sell yourself and anything you own and give me all the money which is not fair.

lol 54 million? why not ask to be president. jeez give her a nice new laptop christ.
I agree with everything except 54 million. Bestbuy should get her a new laptop, compensate her for making her run around and take care of all expenditure if there is an identity theft and fix it free of charge. Lately there has been an attitude of oops you made a mistake sell yourself and anything you own and give me all the money which is not fair.

Basically in a lawsuit like this you don't ask for something like $54 million to be crazy or greedy, it simply takes a number like this to make a company like Best Buy take notice and change their policy in the future. They already offered her a few thousand dollars I believe, and a new laptop, because they know they F'd up pretty bad in this case. I hope she does win the lawsuit, as a large company like Best Buy really does need to have procedures in place so that people's laptops don't just mysteriously vanish without a trace.

1. Any contract anywhere will state for any kind of repair that the repairer cannot be responsible for any data lost. It is the customer responsibility to back up data ect.

2. Why is that some people insist on blaming big companies. I am sure that at each Best Buy they most likely take in at least 10 computers a day. That?s 4000 nationwide. 28000 a week. I think I have seen what 3 stories of reported problems.

3. I doubt people lied. Fact is we don't know the story. It is like taking sides when a couple split up. If your only hearing the dumped side you?re not getting the whole story.

4. Offered a new computer for 900 said that it cost her 1100 for it with the warranty. I looked on line the average warranty cost is 200 up too 300+ for the oops i dropped it versions. Which means that 900 was in all likelihood the cost of the original and the warranty would have been transferred to her new one. As to the "my time" I laugh my ass off when I see people acting like they are supreme court justices whose time is soo important. Well it's not. A company can't give special consideration for someone who lives next door or someone who drives 300 miles to get to the store. Sorry but it's true.

5. I'm suing for the point. Yeah right. Either she is greedy and is hoping for a big pay off or so arrogant has to think she is owed for her again "time" and data.

6. As to the ID theft ummm it called remove it? Or strong passwords? or don't make documents titled "my credit card info.txt" and save it to your desktop. It's not the company it's people. Every company from smal mom and pops to huge multi nationals to goverments depend on people. People can and sometimes do suck and do bad things. Here where I live the loca news stations have a story about being mess over by comanys - local ones every week. it happens.

Edited by XChrome
This topic is now closed to further replies.
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Posts

    • The memory and nvme can be swapped and upgraded with standard parts. But the GPU cannot, which is the weakest part of the box. It's a dead product at these prices.
    • Sounds like the debloated build you are running is missing some components that the Photos app and Snipping Tool rely on.
    • Apparently, Microsoft doesn't use water in their taps, washrooms or clean their facility. /sarc
    • Wow, throwback.  VERY VERY briefly - but realised that it wasn't the language I needed for the tasks I was taking on.
    • Apple and Tesla trade secrets reportedly exposed following a Tata Electronics cyberattack by Hamid Ganji Image via Depositphotos.com Tata Electronics has confirmed that it detected a cybersecurity incident in some of its systems. The Indian company is a manufacturing partner of both Apple and Tesla, and the incident may have exposed some trade secrets belonging to the two American companies. The World Leaks ransomware group is said to be behind the attack, and it has reportedly posted up to 200,000 files on the dark web, including component designs and specification documents related to Apple and Tesla products. Tata Electronics told Reuters that its response protocols were deployed immediately and that the “incident has had no impact on our operations across businesses, which remain unaffected.” The ransomware group reportedly sent a ransom demand to Tata Electronics, while Apple has launched an investigation into the incident. World Leaks claims it stole more than 200,000 files totaling over 630GB from Tata Electronics. Some database files on the ransomware group’s website are titled "com.apple.factorydata," which could refer to Apple’s iPhone production operations in India. Moreover, some documents reportedly contain material specifications and quality inspection standards for iPhone circuit board components. However, Apple is not the only affected company. A folder found in the World Leaks database is titled "NV36 Chargeport Controller - North America," which may refer to Tesla Model Y components. Additionally, other files in the database reportedly contain drawings related to Tesla’s Project Highland, the internal codename for the EV maker’s updated Model 3 sedan. To support the authenticity of the stolen files, World Leaks has published documents containing footers that read: "This document contains proprietary and confidential information of Apple Inc." and "information contained herein is deemed confidential, proprietary, and a trade secret of Tesla Inc." Cybersecurity researcher Rajshekhar Rajaharia told Reuters that the database also contains emails, event logs spanning several years, and passport copies of employees, including foreign nationals. Both Tesla and Apple have declined to comment on the scale of the incident.
  • Recent Achievements

    • One Month Later
      nates earned a badge
      One Month Later
    • Week One Done
      Almohandis earned a badge
      Week One Done
    • Rookie
      dorf went up a rank
      Rookie
    • First Post
      mike_rumble earned a badge
      First Post
    • Dedicated
      tuben earned a badge
      Dedicated
  • Popular Contributors

    1. 1
      +primortal
      483
    2. 2
      +Edouard
      200
    3. 3
      PsYcHoKiLLa
      96
    4. 4
      Michael Scrip
      91
    5. 5
      neufuse
      71
  • Tell a friend

    Love Neowin? Tell a friend!