At this point it doesn't matter much, Remington is circling the drain and I don't see much hope in saving them. The heart of the problem was a bad decision made in 1946 to continue with a flawed design after being warned about what it could do. The 1946-2006 trigger design should have never been put in any gun.
The early 1980's safety redesign was a band-aid which caused more problems than it solved. The original 2 position safety that locked the bolt should have been kept and the trigger proposed in 1946 used instead.
Just because you've never had an issue means nothing. 99.99% of all of these guns will never have a malfunction, but 100% of them have the potential to do so regardless of how well they are maintained or adjusted. With 5 million in production .01% is still a lot of guns. The problem can be traced to the useless trigger connector. It isn't needed and is in no other trigger design, yet if it just happens to slide into the right position the sear will release. It doesn't matter how clean or dirty the trigger is or if it is adjusted to 6 oz., or 6 lbs. The fact that it rarely happens does nothing prove that it never happens.
I've spent a lifetime outdoors and never once been struck by lightening, doesn't prove it doesn't happen. I have seen a Remington fire with no trigger pull. So have thousands of others over the last 68 years. This issue is just too well documented to claim it is "much ado about nothing". There is plenty of damning evidence but some choose to bury their heads in the sand and blame the problem on the news media. Kill the messenger mentality.