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SubscriptionsGo to the Subscriptions Centre to manage your:My ProfileApple Inc. Has failed in its bid for a dismissal of a lawsuit claiming it disabled the popular FaceTime video conferencing feature on older iPhones to force users to upgrade. District Judge Lucy Koh, based in San Jose, Calif., ruled late on Friday that iPhone 4 and 4S users can pursue countrywide class action claims that Apple intentionally "broke" FaceTime to save money from routing calls through servers owned by Akamai Technologies Inc.Neither Apple nor lawyers for the plaintiffs immediately responded on Monday to requests for comment.'Piece of crap': Apple hit with proposed class action lawsuits over iPhone 'touch disease'Apple posts surprise drop in iPhone salesApple began using Akamai's servers after losing a lawsuit in 2012 in which VirnetX Holding Corp claimed that FaceTime technology infringed its patents.Testimony from a 2016 retrial in that case showed that Apple paid Akamai $50