Apple has introduced a 14-day return policy for iTunes sales in Europe
to come into line with new laws governing online sales in the territory
and the changes have the music industry worried.
New European laws now allow for a 14-day trial period for any online purchases, including digital downloads.
Apple
quietly introduced the modification to its terms and conditions in
Europe this week to comply with the 'right of withdrawal' rules approved
by the EU in June, 2014.
Under the new guidelines a customer who
purchases music from iTunes in Europe can now apply for a refund with
no questions asked anytime from the time of purchase through to 14 days
later. The exception is for iTunes gift cards that can only be returned
within 14 days if the customer has not redeemed the code.
iTunes
is even being more generous with its refund policy than the law demands.
The new rules state that a download cannot be returned if the
performance has been played on any device (which iTunes can monitor
through its software).
iTunes, however, will refund the full
price of the purchased music even if the song has been played and thus
creating a concern for an already heavily bootlegged industry. The no
questions asked refund policy makes it easy for music to be downloaded
and copied with the customer then applying for a full refund, therefore
rendering the value of music worthless.
The new iTunes Terms and
Conditions do not apply outside of Europe. Apple has no plans to
implement a similar refund policy in other territories at this stage.
More from Noise11.com
0 comments