Thursday 10 March 2011

Apple's application to purchase paid transfer rules



Apple on Thursday said it has on the iPhone and iPad on the "application to buy" feature to be adjusted to prevent users, especially children because of operational errors and the costs of unnecessary payments.

Apple laptop battery said that in the latest release of iOS 4.3 operating system, users download the application and then want to buy a new application, you need to re-enter the iTunes account password to complete the payment within the application.

Prior to this, iTunes user account password if you have entered, then after 15 minutes, users do not need to pay again to re-enter the password. This may lead to users without their knowledge, due to pay to download some applications, or applications to purchase virtual goods and detained some of the charges. U.S. government and regulators have expressed concern has been that users did not receive sufficient notice.

Some users said it does not require a password for 15 minutes caused them no small losses: their children during this time may be worth hundreds of dollars to download the application, which contains a lot of games.

Apple laptop battery spokesman Chu Di Mule (Trudy Muller), said: "iOS system has industry-leading parental control features, we feel proud." She said, the user has been through the parental control options to their iTunes account restrictions, to avoid accidental payment.

Muller said: "In iOS 4.3, the user in addition to purchase applications from App Store, enter the password, but also need to buy again when making application for a password." But in the next 15 minutes, users still need a password to pay again. This is to meet the payments that require frequent users.

Last December, the Washington State Attorney's Office received a consumer complaint about the unexpected payment problems, and to that end sent a letter to Apple laptop battery. U.S. Federal Trade Commission, Markowitz (Jon Leibowitz) of the legislation said that he would investigate this. U.S. Rep. Ed Markey (Ed Markey) to Apple this policy known as "spoofing marketing" and public interest groups questioned why Apple allows the children's games in the sales price up to 99 dollars, "Snow" and "red" and so on virtual goods, because children may not know whom they need to pay real money.

From: http://www.batterydoctor.info/

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