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Apple llega acuerdo para terminar queja de la FTC en su contra

El 2014 no ha arrancado bien legalmente hablando para Apple y es que un nuevo revés tuvo que ser la salida de Apple en otra conocida mala maniobra de la empresa.

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Apple anunció hoy que ha acordado resolver una demanda presentada por la Comisión Federal de Comercio de Estados Unidos con respecto a las compras in-app hechas y confirmadas que han sido hechas por los niños.

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Team,

I want to let you know that Apple has entered into a consent decree with the U.S. Federal Trade Commission. We have been negotiating with the FTC for several months over disclosures about the in-app purchase feature of the App Store, because younger customers have sometimes been able to make purchases without their parents’ consent. I know this announcement will come as a surprise to many of you since Apple has led the industry by making the App Store a safe place for customers of all ages.

From the very beginning, protecting children has been a top priority for the App Store team and everyone at Apple. The store is thoughtfully curated, and we hold app developers to Apple’s own high standards of security, privacy, usefulness and decency, among others. The parental controls in iOS are strong, intuitive and customizable, and we’ve continued to add ways for parents to protect their children. These controls go far beyond the features of other mobile device and OS makers, most of whom don’t even review the apps they sell to children.

When we introduced in-app purchases in 2009, we proactively offered parents a way to disable the function with a single switch. When in-app purchases were enabled and a password was entered to download an app, the App Store allowed purchases for 15 minutes without requiring a password. The 15-minute window had been there since the launch of the App Store in 2008 and was aimed at making the App Store easy to use, but some younger customers discovered that it also allowed them to make in-app purchases without a parent’s approval.

We heard from some customers with children that it was too easy to make in-app purchases, so we moved quickly to make improvements. We even created additional steps in the purchasing process, because these steps are so helpful to parents.

Last year, we set out to refund any in-app purchase which may have been made without a parent’s permission. We wanted to reach every customer who might have been affected, so we sent emails to 28 million App Store customers – anyone who had made an in-app purchase in a game designed for kids. When some emails bounced, we mailed the parents postcards. In all, we received 37,000 claims and we will be reimbursing each one as promised.

A federal judge agreed with our actions as a full settlement and we felt we had made things right for everyone. Then, the FTC got involved and we faced the prospect of a second lawsuit over the very same issue.

It doesn’t feel right for the FTC to sue over a case that had already been settled. To us, it smacked of double jeopardy. However, the consent decree the FTC proposed does not require us to do anything we weren’t already going to do, so we decided to accept it rather than take on a long and distracting legal fight.

The App Store is one of Apple’s most important innovations, and it’s wildly popular with our customers around the world because they know they can trust Apple. You and your coworkers have helped Apple earn that trust, which we value and respect above all else.

Apple is a company full of disruptive ideas and innovative people, who are also committed to upholding the highest moral, legal and ethical standards in everything we do. As I’ve said before, we believe technology can serve humankind’s deepest values and highest aspirations. As Apple continues to grow, there will inevitably be scrutiny and criticism along our journey. We don’t shy away from these kinds of questions, because we are confident in the integrity of our company and our coworkers.

Thank you for the hard work you do to delight our customers, and for showing them at every turn that Apple is worthy of their trust.

Tim

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Fuente: 9to5MAC

Los detalles, compartidos con los empleados de Apple en un correo electrónico del CEO Tim Cook, indican que Apple pagará la FTC $ 32,500,000 a retirar la denuncia en su contra, adicional que Apple ya resolvió una demanda de clase presentada por los consumidores cuyos hijos sin saberlo, compraron hasta cientos de dólares de compras a través de aplicaciones que tienen funciones de revender servicios y contenidos.

Apple ha cambiado desde entonces sus políticas de compra in-app y está en el proceso de reembolso de unos 37,000 demandantes en el caso original.

No obstante, Cook no se inhibió en decir que el proceso y la demanda fue injusta para Apple y que era peligrosa pero el deseo de evitar alargar una pelea donde nadie va ceder, fue la razón por la cuál decidió llegar al acuerdo.

Aunque siempre he dicho que Apple se cree que son de esas empresas que pueden hacer lo que les da la gana y que el gobierno debe de abstenerse a interferir con su negocio, el cual culpo a nosotros mismos por permitirlo, creo que en esta ocasión (NADA MÁS) tienen razón.

Apple es solamente una empresa que lanzan productos, ¿EN QUE CABEZA CABE darle un equipo iOS a un niño?

Sean ustedes los jueces.

Amante de la Tecnología, Blogging, Música y del Vacilón. Fanático de Linux, Ingeniero, Critico Tecnológico, Humano. "Tantas cosas por las que la gente trolea y a sabiendas que la vida es una, prefiero dejarlos como locos."