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Defective and Dangerous
Products
Defective
and Dangerous Products: Overview

The phrase "products liability" is used to
describe situations in which a person or property is
injured or damaged in some way due to a defective product
or service. Products liability is not a legal theory
like strict liability, negligence, or intentional torts,
rather the phrase simply means that the supplier, manufacturer,
seller, or provider of a product or service may be liable
for any injury or damage caused by such product or service.
There are generally two types of defective products,
those with defective designs and those that are manufactured
improperly.
Design defects occur when the engineering process used
by a company to design a product is faulty, resulting
in a product that is unnecessarily dangerous. With a
design defect, all of the items that come off a company's
assembly line have the same defect.
On the other hand, a manufacturing defect occurs when
a product is not manufactured as designed. While there
is nothing wrong with the product's overall design,
the manner in which it is assembled is flawed. With
a manufacturing defect, the problem is usually not common
to all of the items which roll off the company's assembly
line, but rather with only a few.
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