Were your refunded? I don't see the issue if you were... It was obvious it was a pricing mistake.
Yeah, if the OP was refunded I see no problem. If not, it's a completely different story.
Were your refunded? I don't see the issue if you were... It was obvious it was a pricing mistake.
That doesn't necessarily inspire a lot of sympathy with me. Isn't that how the market works?
The stores that price well, advertise efficiently and work carefully will tend to stay in business. Stores that make knuckleheaded errors go under.
Yeah, if the OP was refunded I see no problem. If not, it's a completely different story.
Yes it's allowed. It was a price bug for goodness sake. There will be more deals in the future
lol of course it is, my god
You make a good point here. You are responsible for the consequences. But the thing is that Ana in this case isn't sentient or even human.
Well, I disagree on what the "equivalent" of an illegal move would be. The price may have been stupid from the retailer's point of view, but it was a valid price. If the price was listed as "NaN" or "-1207", then I don't think we'd be having this conversation.If the move was an erroneous one such as an illegal move like a pawn moving sideways (the computer setting the wrong price), then is it allowed then?
I think a lot of people here would be interested to see your source on this. It would put many concerns to bed.
Hey if you want to jump guard em for it, go ahead, but I'm not really down with dropkicking a retailer for a legitimate pricing mistake, especially considering they tried to do as much of a make good as they could
I'm not disagreeing with you. But if you provide that source, you could single-handedly shed some much needed insight into why this sort of action is legal.
Hey if you want to jump guard em for it, go ahead, but I'm not really down with dropkicking a retailer for a legitimate pricing mistake, especially considering they tried to do as much of a make good as they could
This analogy is getting reeeeally stretched.But whatever, we've come this far...
This goes back to my original point: programmers are responsible for the programs they create. If I write a program to automatically buy stocks—this happens in the real world all the time, see high frequency trading—and a bug in the program causes it to screw up and buy a bunch of penny stocks instead of legitimate ones, I am on the hook for what my computer bought. The fact that the actual buyer was neither sentient nor human is irrelevant, because I authorized that program to make purchases on my behalf.
Well, I disagree on what the "equivalent" of an illegal move would be. The price may have been stupid from the retailer's point of view, but it was a valid price. If the price was listed as "NaN" or "-1207", then I don't think we'd be having this conversation.
It is not that simple, this practice is illegal to prevent shops advertising false prices to draw people attention, at least here in Spain, the Law of Electronic Commerce forces you to sell an item for the price you advertise it.
No clue why you're asking for a source
In the moment you click the "pay" button, a formal contract is signed between you and the shop, they are agreeing to sell you an item for a particular price.
They can't just revoke that contract uniterally, it makes not sense and it is just ilegal.
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You could've just said 'cause I want an argument' you know
Yeah, but I don't think they were trying to draw people's attention. The only thing that got to this to be huge was the exposure it got after the fact.
No clue why you're asking for a source, OP said allowed
Again, wanna throw hands at them legally, you probably can, but it almost assuredly will be a waste of time
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Trust me, no business wants you as a customer, if your sympathy towards them requires the entitlement to abuse every single pricing mistake they make.
Sure, alright. But if the program causes errors / bugs, isn't it also up to the programmer to fix them? Like if the program does something to the database and corrupts data, don't the programmer also have to go fix the bug that caused the data corruption AND restore the corrupted data as well as restoring any errors caused by corrupted data that propogated?
But another shop doing it deliberately could say the same, and it would be impossible to prove they are lying. That is why law protects the consumer, because he is in a disadvantage situation.
The OP is completely in the right ethically, and it continues to disturb me how erroded consumer rights are in the digital space, and now many consumers in the industry don't care.
If Half Price Books mislabels a book with the wrong price, and then I buy it, they can't call me the next day and demand that I bring the book back. Nor can they walk into my house, take the book off my shelf and destroy it, and leave a $5 refund on my kitchen table as compensation.
It's sheer anti-consumer corporatism that digital goods work any other way. Digital goods that are positioned and sold like stand-alone products (even if they're technically just game keys or licenses) should legally have the same consumer protections as physical goods, or as close to it as practically possible.
Of course I'd like the game instead, why wouldn't i? If i didn't want the game at that price i wouldn't have purchased it in the first place.
I'm not that annoyed that i won't be getting the game, it's more that it just feels wrong for them to do this. They did fulfil their end of it technically; they took the payment and provided the game, then took it away even though it had already been provided to customers. That doesn't seem like it's just them not fulfilling their end of it. Just refusing a sale or cancelling an order before it's completed isn't the same as providing something and then going back on the sale and taking off the customer after it's legally theirs.
It's not wrong though, what they did is okay and completely justified.It was a mistake, they're a business and don't want to lose money, that's fine. , but to me It's more just the key-revoking situation happening that i have a problem with rather than not getting the game itself. If their ToS had something in it that addressed this (e.g. saying what would happen with a price mistake) happen and didn't include something that they're basically choosing to ignore, i wouldn't really be bothered about it.
If they had cancelled orders before they had been fulfilled there wouldn't have been anything wrong with that at all, but completing a purchase and then deciding otherwise after it's already done just feels wrong.
You do have full rights to be wary of the retailer but they are completely in the rights for doing this.Legally a company can do this i'm sure. Its a little scary that a retailer can do this anytime they want and even work through a 3rd party to do it but sure they can. I as a consumer also have the full right to be wary of a retailer that would do this to me. It's not called entitlement, its called not wanting to worry about my game purchases being revoked. There are many other retailers to choose from.
Sure they can, price mistakes don't always get honored, it depends how the company feels. Like I remember getting a copy of SFA3 Max from Gamefly for 1 buck a few years ago.
Legality is one thing, but they're banking on people getting salty about it for a bit and then moving on, which will be what happens here
Even if it said so there, that wouldn't mean anything. In most countries the Terms and Conditions are subordinate to consumer laws.Read their Terms and Conditions. Where does it say that's allowed?
In the moment you click the "pay" button, a formal contract is signed between you and the shop, they are agreeing to sell you an item for a particular price.
They can't just revoke that contract uniterally, it makes not sense and it is just ilegal.
Imagine you enter a videogames shop, buy a videogame for a suspiciously low price, the employee doesn't notice until you leave the shop.
¿Can he reclaim the item back because he fucked up with the price? Of course not.
This is the same case.
Yes, which is why the game is no longer listed at that price. Restoring corrupted data is irrelevant, because that's not what happened here: a transaction has been made, and transactions are generally considered final. After all, if I as a consumer misread the price, and don't notice my mistake until after the key has been redeemed, I'm generally SOL. Retailers should be held to the same standard.
In the moment you click the "pay" button, a formal contract is signed between you and the shop, they are agreeing to sell you an item for a particular price.
They can't just revoke that contract uniterally, it makes not sense and it is just ilegal.
Non-performance of a contract is not illegal and happens all the time.
It being digital changes this whole thing.
I've run into this with things I've ordered from Amazon (gotten a few duplicates). If you contact them, worst case scenario, you send the item back, but 90% of the time, it's not worth the hassle to them, so they tell you to keep it.
Revoking codes is the nuclear option but it's been used before.
The other way this goes - Target had Forza Horizon 3 for 20$ earlier this year on digital, and they honored all of those orders, IIRC. But they can take that hit.
Of course it is illegal if the contract is valid, and any judge would rule in favor of the consumer.
Being digital does not change anything, I don't know what makes you think otherwise.
If any, being an electronic purchase, it gives the consumer more rights.
Contract was fulfilled and nulled with things restored to the way they were. Nullification of contracts are a thing.
It gives them more rights, but more importantly, it gives the retailer the ability to go YOINK and revoke the license.
Like joezombie said, it's all about what they can get Steam to do for them.
A contract cannot be nulled unilaterally, that is why it is a contract.
Fine, probably null is a bad term. Cancellation of a contract is generally allowed within a few business days.
A contract cannot be nulled unilaterally, that is why it is a contract. It has to be done by a judge or by mutual agreement.
A contract cannot be nulled unilaterally, that is why it is a contract. It has to be done by a judge or by mutual agreement.
Of coure it can, there are a ton of scenarios where a contrat is nulled unilaterally. Like my post above or when a minor is involved or the offer wasn't in good faith.
Of course it can, otherwise my phone company would not be able to cut me off for not paying the bill. A contract can be voided by a breach of its terms by either party.
It is not that simple, this practice is illegal to prevent shops advertising false prices to draw people attention, at least here in Spain, the Law of Electronic Commerce forces you to sell an item for the price you advertise it.
This really isn't an issue of what I want them to do, it's an issue of what they're potentially required to do. You have to work within the framework of consumer laws that apply to you.Trust me, no business wants you as a customer, if your sympathy towards them requires the entitlement to abuse every single pricing mistake they make.
That is part of the contract.
It is not unilaterally, the only one who can nullify the contract is a judge.
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