The European Commission must take a larger role to monitor and coordinate consumer protection laws, Justice Commissioner Viviane Reding said Tuesday, citing Apple as a prime example of the need for the Commission to get tougher.
“In at least 21 E.U. countries, Apple is not informing consumers correctly about the legal warranty rights they have,” Reding said at the European Consumer Summit in Brussels. “This is simply not good enough.”
Reding wrote to consumer ministers in all E.U. countries last September, urging them to take action after Apple was fined by Italian authorities, but she received replies from only 15 out of 27 member states.
Apple was fined $1.16 million by the Italian Antitrust Authority for not providing consumers with information regarding E.U.-protected warranty rights, instead misleading customers and pushing their own paid-for warranty, Applecare. Under E.U. consumer law, buyers are automatically entitled to a free minimum two-year warranty.
To read this article in full or to leave a comment, please click here