MacBooks sending 50 Volts to the CPU

Article Status Notice: This Article is a stub


This article is underdeveloped, and needs additional work to meet the wiki's Content Guidelines and be in line with our Mission Statement for comprehensive coverage of consumer protection issues. Learn more ▼

⚠️ Article status notice: This Article's Relevance Is Under Review

This article has been flagged for questionable relevance. Its connection to the systemic consumer protection issues outlined in the Mission statement and Moderator Guidelines isn't clear.

If you believe this notice has been placed in error, or once you have made the required improvements, please visit the #appeals channel on our Discord server: Join Here.

Notice: This Article's Relevance Is Under Review

To justify the relevance of this article:

  • Provide evidence demonstrating how the issue reflects broader consumer exploitation (e.g., systemic patterns, recurring incidents, or related company policies).
  • Link the problem to modern forms of consumer protection concerns, such as privacy violations, barriers to repair, or ownership rights.

If you believe this notice has been placed in error, or once you have made the required improvements, please visit the #appeals channel on our Discord server: Join Here.


Apple's older MacBooks include a poorly designed logic board, where the 50 power line for the screen backlight is one pin away from the data line for the screen image, with no ground in between them. Resulting in 50 volts to be sent to the CPU upon various unforeseen circumstances.[1]

Background edit

Information about the product/service history to provide the necessary context surrounding the incident


Add your text below this box. Once this section is complete, delete this box by clicking on it and pressing backspace.

[Incident] edit

Apple's response edit

Lawsuit edit

If applicable, add any information regarding litigation around the incident here.

Claims

Main claims of the suit.

Rebuttal

The response of the company or counterclaims.

Outcome

The outcome of the suit, if any.


Add your text below this box. Once this section is complete, delete this box by clicking on it and pressing backspace.


Consumer response edit

Summary and key issues of prevailing sentiment from the consumers and commentators that can be documented via articles, emails to support, reviews and forum posts.


Add your text below this box. Once this section is complete, delete this box by clicking on it and pressing backspace.


References edit