Saturday, February 7, 2026
ADVT 
National

Kanye West's Ranting Tweets On In-app Purchases Highlight Problem In Kids' Games

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 18 Oct, 2015 01:11 PM
    Toronto single mom Robyn Holmes sympathizes with Kanye West.
     
    Like the hip-hop star, who recently dropped an F-bomb on Twitter over in-app purchases for kids' mobile video games, Holmes has been burned by her young child inadvertently racking up a bill on her tablet.
     
    In Holmes's case, her then-four-year-old daughter was playing "Angry Birds" and clicked on over a dozen in-app purchase prompts to advance to new levels.
     
    "Then I start receiving these emails on my device, 'Thanks for your purchase,' and I'm like, 'Oh my God, what purchase?'" recalls Holmes, an IT problem manager. 
     
    "I look and all of a sudden I've got this $80 bill for stuff that she's bought."
     
    Holmes didn't realize that certain settings on the tablet allowed her daughter to make in-app purchases. She's since learned her lesson — one that West clearly just did as well, based on his recent tweet that started with an expletive and then derided "any game company that puts in-app purchases on kids games!!!"
     
    "That makes no sense!!! We give the iPad to our child and every 5 minutes there's a new purchase!!!" West continued in another tweet.
     
    "If a game is made for a 2 year old, just allow them to have fun and give the parents a break for Christ sake."
     
    Actor Jack Black has also been affected by costly in-app purchases, lamenting on "The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon" in May that his young son spent $3,000 on just one game.
     
    In-app purchasing is typically available in games that are advertised as free to download. Sometimes just the first few minutes of play are free, or users may be tempted with the option to buy more lives, bonus features or premium content with real money.
     
    Digital media expert Aimee Morrison, associate professor of English at the University of Waterloo, says the problem improved somewhat after developers of "free" games started indicating in app store descriptions when in-app purchases were available.
     
    But the total cost of in-app purchases can vary wildly, she adds. Some games offer dozens of hours of fun for just a few bucks, while others require substantially more.
     
    The biggest piece of advice from experts is for parents to change settings on their devices to prevent children from making such purchases.
     
    Parents can also seek out kids' games that don't have such traps.
     
    Toronto-based studio Sago Sago, for instance, makes apps that are free of in-app purchases and third-party ads for children ages two to four. Instead, most of the apps cost $2.99 for the entire game upfront.
     
    "It creates challenges for us but the reality is that we've won the trust of a lot of parents," says CEO Jason Krogh.
     
    Morrison says she would like to see more transparency from developers, with kids' apps disclosing how much it would cost to achieve full functionality in a game.
     
    The Samuelson-Glushko Canadian Internet Policy & Public Interest Clinic, based at the University of Ottawa, has defended several clients dealing with this very issue.
     
    Director David Fewer says one client had a child rack up over $800 in purchases on what was at the time a popular kid-focused gaming platform.
     
    "Usually the first response is to go back to whoever it is that's taking your money and say, 'We didn't agree to this. You shouldn't be charging me this. This is outrageous,'" says Fewer.
     
    "And usually the companies are good enough to reverse the charges."
     
    Fewer says he'd like to see more safeguards in place, such as a secondary confirmation prompt telling the card holder that their account is about to be used.
     
    "Because it is abusive of consumers," he says. "Most people will contest an $800 bill, but how many people will contest an $8 bill or even an $80 bill?"
     
     
    Count Holmes among those who "ate the cost" of the bill and learned from it.
     
    "I should've been more aware," she says. "I went online and I told all my friends ... and they were all like, 'Oh my God, I didn't even think of that.'"

    MORE National ARTICLES

    3 Charges Against Man Accused Of Attacking Woman In Wooded Area Of Surrey

    3 Charges Against Man Accused Of Attacking Woman In Wooded Area Of Surrey
    Helmer Sinisterra-Mosquera faces one count each of sexual assault, assault causing bodily harm and overcoming resistance by choking

    3 Charges Against Man Accused Of Attacking Woman In Wooded Area Of Surrey

    Canadian Arthur Mcdonald Shares Nobel Prize In Physics For Work On Neutrinos

    Canadian Arthur Mcdonald Shares Nobel Prize In Physics For Work On Neutrinos
    A professor emeritus at Queen's University in Kingston, Ont. is a co-winner of the 2015 Nobel Prize in Physics for his work on tiny particles known as neutrinos.

    Canadian Arthur Mcdonald Shares Nobel Prize In Physics For Work On Neutrinos

    B.C. Wife, Husband Stuck After IRA-Related Refugee Claim Turned Down

    B.C. Wife, Husband Stuck After IRA-Related Refugee Claim Turned Down
    A former British soldier married to a disabled Canadian woman may be forced to leave their Victoria home for the United Kingdom after a series of missteps and a snarl of red tape.

    B.C. Wife, Husband Stuck After IRA-Related Refugee Claim Turned Down

    Grieving Family Of British Diver Says Inquest Could Improve Scuba Diving Safety In B.c.

    Grieving Family Of British Diver Says Inquest Could Improve Scuba Diving Safety In B.c.
    The 27-year-old was swept away by the tidal current and his body was not found for more than seven weeks.

    Grieving Family Of British Diver Says Inquest Could Improve Scuba Diving Safety In B.c.

    Nearly One In Six Could Not Handle $500 Increase In Mortgage Payment: Poll

    Nearly One In Six Could Not Handle $500 Increase In Mortgage Payment: Poll
    Another 26 per cent said they would be concerned, but could probably handle it.

    Nearly One In Six Could Not Handle $500 Increase In Mortgage Payment: Poll

    TPP: Will Canadian Companies Take Advantage Of The World's Largest Trade Zone?

    TPP: Will Canadian Companies Take Advantage Of The World's Largest Trade Zone?
    With the world's largest economy right next door, Canada's business community has had good reason to remain focused on the fish-in-a-barrel opportunities offered by the United States market.

    TPP: Will Canadian Companies Take Advantage Of The World's Largest Trade Zone?