The point is that they specifically advertised NOT having those and were caught lying.
The point is that they specifically advertised NOT having those and were caught lying.
While the class action suit has the positive outcome of Thinx essentially admitting wrongdoing, as usual such suits result in relatively very tiny awards to the actual plantiffs vs the involved lawyers.
Coming here to say the same thing. It sounds mostly that Thinx was guilty of bad marketing, by claiming to be healthy and sustainable, and being like every other company. Virtually none of the things we put in/on our bodies are regulated. To your point, PFAs are everywhere, and nearly impossible to avoid. We’re likely…
Every claimant is getting a MAXIMUM of $21 back. When I go the the settlement site, it tells me it knows I made a purchase, and what I purchased, but it doesn’t include the *when* or the actual order info, both of which are needed to get the full $7 per pair back. Without that proof, you get even less. Sorry for not…