G.Skill to Pay $2.4 Million to Settle Class Action Over DDR4 and DDR5 Memory Speeds
Memory manufacturer G.Skill has reached a settlement agreement to resolve a class action lawsuit alleging deceptive advertising related to the performance speeds of its DDR4 and DDR5 memory modules. The legal action accused the company of misrepresenting the operating frequencies of its memory kits sold between January 2018 and January 2026.
Allegations Overstated RAM Speeds
The lawsuit contended that G.Skill’s advertising and product specifications inaccurately touted higher clock speeds for certain DDR4 and DDR5 modules, leading consumers to believe the memory would perform faster than was actually achievable. The claims spanned an extensive period, covering nearly eight years of sales.
As part of a pre-litigation settlement, G.Skill has agreed to pay $2.4 million in compensation related to these allegations. Despite the settlement, the company maintains that it denies all claims of wrongdoing or deception in its marketing of memory products.
The settlement aims to provide redress to customers who purchased the affected RAM products. Details on the distribution of the settlement funds or instructions for eligible claimants have not been publicly disclosed at this time.
This case highlights ongoing consumer scrutiny in the computer hardware industry regarding transparency in performance specifications, especially as faster memory modules become key components in gaming, content creation, and professional computing systems.
DDR4 and DDR5 memory technologies represent successive generations of system memory, with DDR5 offering improved speeds and efficiency over DDR4. Accurate claims about operational MHz and timings are important for customers seeking specific performance characteristics for overclocking and system optimization.
The resolution of this dispute comes as the market continues to evolve rapidly, with manufacturers under pressure to balance marketing appeal with rigorous technical standards and truthful disclosures.
G.Skill agrees to a $2.4 million settlement over allegations of overstating speeds on DDR4 and DDR5 RAM modules sold from 2018 to 2026.
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