Samsung, SK Hynix & Micron are facing a class action lawsuit in the US as memory prices spiral out of control due to persistent shortages.
Consumers File A Class Action Lawsuit Against Samsung, SK Hynix & Micron Alleging That The Memory Trio Restricted DRAM Supply To Inflate Prices
Memory prices have reached a historical high due to ongoing shortages as demand continues to outstrip supply. The worst is yet to come, but as the situation continues to evolve, consumers are getting fed up and have filed a private class-action lawsuit in the US against the three big DRAM manufacturers.
The lawsuit "3:26-cv-06345" has the nature of "Anti-Trust" and will be headed by Judge Noel Wise in the United States District Court for the Northern District of California. According to the lawsuit, the filers have demanded compensation from these companies. The claim is that these companies gouged prices by artificially creating shortages in the industry.

The parties involved in the filing of the case include: Theo Papulis, Thomas Yu, Tyree Burnett Jr., Wastenotime Developments Performance Fabrications d/b/a WNTD Fab LLC, Thomas Barber, Brian Graber, Paul Henning, Evan Feliciano, Marc Garciaguirre, Rudolfo Gurrola Jr., Jeff Ramirez Ochoa, JB Tech Solutions LLC d/b/a My Florida PC, John Prineas, Troy's Computers LLC, Joseph Flores, Joseph Danson, Brook Barclift. And was filed on 25th June, 2026.
Previously, Samsung Electronics was filed $300 million in criminal fees by the US Department of Justice (DOJ) back in 2005. The company was fined for price-fixing practices of DRAM between April 1999 and June 2002.
PC makers such as Dell Inc., Compaq Computer Corporation, Hewlett-Packard Company, Apple Computer Inc., International Business Machines Corporation, and Gateway Inc were the main affectees of this, and Samsung pleaded guilty for its actions. Others in the list were Micron, Hynix, Infineon, and Elpida.

Although this is not a similar situation to the case back in 2005, since there are indeed shortages due to higher demand from the AI segment, and these companies have claimed to be working on the construction of additional fabs and production lines to expand supply.
We will see what the outcome of this lawsuit turns out to be, but for now, the prices continue to go up, and shortages cannot meet the demand, not even in the coming years. DRAM makers are already engaging in multi-year partnerships with strategic customers, which further puts standard consumer markets under pressure.
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