Apple to refund parents $32.5m for apps bought by children

Company to change billing practices to ensure consent is given before billing

Apple CEO Tim Cook speaking about apps during an Apple event in San Francisco in 2012. Apple  will refund consumers at least $32.5 million to settle a longstanding complaints that the technology company billed  consumers for charges incurred by children buying mobile apps without their parents’ consent. Photograph: Robert Galbraith/Reuters
Apple CEO Tim Cook speaking about apps during an Apple event in San Francisco in 2012. Apple will refund consumers at least $32.5 million to settle a longstanding complaints that the technology company billed consumers for charges incurred by children buying mobile apps without their parents’ consent. Photograph: Robert Galbraith/Reuters

Apple has said it will refund at least $32.5 million (€23.9 million) to consumers to settle a US Federal Trade Commission complaint that it billed for mobile application purchases made by children without their parents' consent.

Under the terms of the settlement, Apple also agreed to change its billing practices to make sure that it has obtained “express, informed consent” from consumers before charging them for items sold in mobile apps.

"Consumers should not have to sacrifice basic consumer protections to enjoy the benefits of mobile technology," FTC Chairwoman Edith Ramirez said at a press conference in Washington today to announce the settlement.

Ms Ramirez said the $32.5 million figure is just a floor and that consumers will get full refunds to cover purchases from March 2011.

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The FTC deal is Apple’s latest entanglement with the US government, which has stepped up its scrutiny of the Cupertino, California-based company.

The iPhone maker also is battling with the US Justice Department over a court-appointed monitor assigned to review the company's compliance with an antitrust lawsuit it lost last year regarding e-book sales.

A Senate committee last year also released a report criticsing the company for policies that allow it to avoid paying billions of dollars in US taxes.

Setting precedent

Apple, the world's biggest company by market value, should expect the attention to continue, said David Balto, a Washington-based attorney who was previously a policy director at the FTC.

The government “knows perfectly well that a case against Apple sets rules for the road,” he said. “If they are willing to go against Apple it shows they are willing to go against anybody.”

The FTC settlement stems from the billing mechanism within Apple’s App Store that made it easy for children to ring up charges while playing games without the parent being aware.

Many games in the App Store use what’s called “in-app purchases” in which a player can pay to get more features or advance more quickly.

Apple’s App Store is the digital marketplace for buying games, productivity tools, picture-taking and social-networking tools and other software for the iPhone and iPad.

The company said earlier this month that customers spent $10 billion on the App Store in 2013, with almost 3 billion apps downloaded during December.

Developers who make the software applications have earned $15 billion by selling their software through the Apple Store.

Apple takes a 30 per cent cut of App Store purchases.

Safeguarding children

“Protecting children has been a top priority for the App Store from the very beginning, and Apple is proud to have set the gold standard for online stores by making the App Store a safe place for customers of all ages,” Apple said in a statement.

The agreement with the FTC “extends our existing refund program for in-app purchases which may have been made without a parent’s permission.”

Apple's deal with the FTC comes after the company settled a similar class-action lawsuit in California last year, resolving claims that the company induced children to make game-related purchases on iPhones and iPads without their parents' knowledge or permission.

The agreement with the FTC doesn't require Apple to do anything it wasn't already doing, chief executive Tim Cook wrote in an email to employees.

Bloomberg