You owe grandma $2500 ... iTunes and Apple are not taking advantage of you. Hopefully your child is grounded for this behavior. Pay what you owe.That's for that. Anyone else?
I've been there and done that. Itunes doesn't care a whit WHO bought the items unless it was by pure theft. Someones child being unsupervised enough and long enough as to incur $2500 in charges isn't theft and Itunes will basically say oh well.Have you even tried contacting Apple? They can be pretty reasonable in situations like yours, though I doubt they'll refund the whole amount. After all, there have been credit card charges, likely requiring a password, for 6 months.
Funny thing: Apparently my 11yr old also plays Dragonvale on my mothers Ipad and just explained to me how buying things works. Knowing that, I now reiterate my stance that there is NO way NOBODY knew kiddo was buying crazy expensive items during a 6 month time span. Really, OP is definitely on the hook here and is just being obtuse about thinking its on Apple.Using your logic, OP, you would agree that Little Johnny from down the street would be forgiven for swiping your credit card to feed his Farmville obsession...right?
Didn't think so.
Grandma is on the hook to Apple. Anything else is a family matter IMO.Funny thing: Apparently my 11yr old also plays Dragonvale and just explained to me how buying things works. Knowing that, I now reiterate my stance that there is NO way NOBODY knew kiddo was buying crazy expensive items during a 6 month time span. Really, OP is definitely on the hook here and is just being obtuse about thinking its on Apple.
Technically that's very true.Grandma is on the hook to Apple. Anything else is a family matter IMO.
Then there is the email thing. If grandmas information is the accounts link then she knew every single time kiddo made a purchase. She either didn't care or is so horrible with money that it took her 6 months to figure out what receipts for purchase meant. I suspect she knew all along.I was going to add that Grandma *could* sue the parents, but, as I think about it more, I don't believe the parents would be responsible at all. Grandma gave the phone to an 8 year old and failed to supervise the usage. An 8 year old doesn't know any better, and any failure of supervision is on Grandma's part, not the parents.