Apple Offers Refund Over '4G' IPad
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Apple offers refund over '4G' iPad

Sydney - Apple on Wednesday offered to refund Australian customers who felt misled by advertising about 4G capabilities on its new iPad, which can only access the ultra-fast wireless network in North America.

Australia's Competition and Consumer Commission has taken Apple to the Federal Court for false advertising over its "iPad with Wi-Fi + 4G" promotion, because the popular tablet device does not work on the local 4G frequency.

The US tech giant's lawyers said Apple was prepared to publish a clarification about the tablet's Australian capabilities, and refund any customers who felt they had been misled by the 4G reference.

Paul Anastassiou, counsel for Apple, said in court in Melbourne that the company was confident very few people would apply for a refund.

Anastassiou added that Apple was not prepared to put corrective stickers on iPad boxes, as sought by the ACCC, but would e-mail customers to clarify that the device was not compatible with local carrier Telstra's 4G network.

Full trial

It would also publish notices to that effect at the point of sale "for the sake of absolute clarity".

However, Anastassiou said that when the matter came to full trial, Apple would contest the ACCC's claims that it had misled consumers because the third-generation iPad did work on other Telstra frequencies.

"It will be contested by Apple there are in Australia networks that, according to international definitions, are 4G," he told the court, according to The Age newspaper.

"What Apple says is that other networks operated by Telstra are in fact properly described by international standards as 4G, even though Telstra itself does not so describe them."

Anastassiou added that Apple had "at no point in any promotional material... said at any time" that the new iPad was compatible with Telstra's 4G network.

The ACCC is seeking an injunction to sales along with a financial penalty against Apple, corrective advertising and refunds to consumers.

Judge Mordecai Bromberg said it was "more relevant" what an ordinary consumer understood from the term 4G, while ACCC lawyer Colin Golvan argued that the promotion was confusing.

Sales

"The iPad should not be sold as compatible with the 4G network or by reference to the terminology 'plus 4G'," Golvan said.

"Apple does not have an iPad which would meet a consumer request for an iPad which operates using a SIM card in the [Australian] 4G network."

On its website, Apple spells out that the new iPad's "4G LTE" capability is supported only on networks in the US and Canada.

The California-based company announced last week that it had sold three million of the latest tablet computers in its first weekend on the market - the strongest iPad launch yet.

Its popularity comes despite the new iPad's incompatibility with the 4G networks operative in the Asia-Pacific and European markets where it is also now on sale, such as Japan, Britain, France and Germany.

According to reports in the technology media, the European Union's executive commission could follow Australia's lead in taking action against Apple over the 4G marketing.

The latest case is not the first time Apple's technology has landed in Australia's courts.

The firm is locked in a legal battle with rival Samsung over tablet patents, part of a wider global tussle over supremacy of the $100bn market.

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