A Tesla influencer randomly caught his odometer double-counting mileage on video. Wild.

  • Noxy@pawb.social
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    22 hours ago

    One of the drivers mentioned in this article has a youtube video showing his odometer going from 124,999 to 125,001, completely skipping 125,000. One of the comments asks him to reach out to the law firm handling the class action lawsuit, but the owner replies with:

    Happy to help if you’re interested in paying a consultation fee for my time-- but otherwise these actions only enrich the law firms and I’m not volunteering to do that.

    This mindset is so frustrating. Class action lawsuits are legit, they hold companies accountable and they pay out cash to people. To say that they only enrich law firms is not just wrong, but I think actually harmful to repeat like he has, especially in the great age of enshittification where everything tries to force binding arbitration agreements into every contract and agreement.

    • gamer@lemm.ee
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      6 hours ago

      Actually based. The law firm is going to make a bunch of money from this and pay out a pittance to people (like a $50 Tesla merch gift card or some shit). Charging a consulting fee isn’t going to kill the case, it’s just going to make the law firm slightly less money, and they’d be stupid to ignore such a powerful piece of evidence.

    • Raltoid@lemmy.world
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      17 hours ago

      I’d be a lot of money that the excuse is just a lie he thinks make him sound like the good person he knows he is not.

      • Croquette@sh.itjust.works
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        10 hours ago

        I mean, the guy is not wrong. Class actions lawsuits have notoriously low payout while law firms pocket millions.

        However, it’s a tool to hold companies somewhat accountable.

        The guy should join a class action lawsuit so that Tesla stop their fuckery, but it is understandable that he doesn’t want to spend time on that considering the shitty payout.

        • kungen@feddit.nu
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          10 hours ago

          Another side is that you’re also bound to their agreement. If the law firm was too soft on them, tough luck.

          In an ideal world, we’d have government agencies prosecuting illegal stuff (and putting huge fines back into the economy) instead of hoping that private law firms will do a class action, but oh well.

      • lennivelkant@discuss.tchncs.de
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        19 hours ago

        The point is that the company being sued has to pay those millions in the first place. The law firm does pay itself rather well for that work, but I’d consider class actions to be one of the more defensible legal actions.