12-Year-Old Boy Gets $100K Bill From Google After Confusing Adwords With Adsense (theregister.co.uk)
The names Google gives to its services can be a bit confusing at times, especially since there are so many of them. For example, Adwords and Adsense look and sound very similar but they deal with two different transaction types. While Adwords deals with spending money, Adsense deals with earning money. A 12-year-old boy in Spain managed to confused the two services and ended up with a bill of 100,000 euros ($111,490). The Register reports: Jose Javier, 12, had signed up for Google's Adwords program in order to make money from advertisements placed alongside YouTube videos of his band, the Torrevieja llamada Los Salerosos -- en ingles, the Torrevieja Fun Guys -- named after the Alicante town in which he lives. Unfortunately, for the young musician, Google's AdWords program is for those wishing to advertise at cost, rather than run advertisements for profit. According to a report from Spanish daily El Pais, Jose and a friend planned to buy instruments, play music, get rich and buy a mansion by subscribing to the service. By early September the account was being billed by Google, receiving charges which reportedly rose quickly from an initial 15 euros ($16.72) to 19,700 euros ($21,960.57) at a time until the amount owed hit six figures. Google's statement noted that AdWords has age restrictions in place and encouraged families to familiarize itself with its Safety Center, but the boy's mother complained to El Pais that it was too easy for her son to make the purchases from Google, requiring him only to provide his savings account details, which he did in mid-August. Thankfully, Google was kind enough to cancel the outstanding balance on its Adwords service.
In the United States, contracts with underage individuals are usually not enforceable unless ratified after the minor reaches adulthood or approved by a court. I am guessing there is something similar in Spain, although the ages may vary.
Real lawyers write in C++
Eh, why did you give a 12 year old this information in the first place? I am genuinely confused as to why he had the banking info needed.
I can't speak for Spain, but in France, I had a "Jeans" account when I was around that age.
It came with a bunch of comic books to teach me about banking and a banking ledger that I was supposed to fill out myself.
So that people without it wont bother trying to use the service.
I'm in the US and i had a savings account when I was that age. I wasn't able to write checks, but I could deposit them myself. My parents had created the account for me when I was very young, and I was able to do some of my own banking with it when I was around 10 years old.
“Common sense is not so common.” — Voltaire
I'm in the US and i had a savings account when I was that age. I wasn't able to write checks, but I could deposit them myself. My parents had created the account for me when I was very young, and I was able to do some of my own banking with it when I was around 10 years old.
I lived in the US as well, but I had a full banking account when I was 10 - I could both deposit and withdraw money. The bank I had offered it as a service to kids, and while I can't speak for others, I think it was great to get a feel for what working with money is like while the only thing on the line was my rather meager allowance.
"Set a man a fire, he'll be warm for the rest of the night. Set a man afire, he'll be warm for the rest of his life."
After all that advertising, they still hadn't sold enough to pay the bill?
Sounds like Google ads don't really work all that well.
Children under 13 have to get on the internet to do their homework.
No sir I dont like it.
I used Adwords a few years ago, as a kind of test. At the time, I set a limit of $100, thus depending on how many people click the ad, the limit is reached more or less quickly. But in any case, $100 was the maximum I had to pay.
Slashdot, fix the reply notifications... You won't get away with it...
I've had a (UK) savings account since I was 6. Couldn't do much except put money in and take money out, but I had an account number and sort code.
Something is fishy about this story. Google Adwords in Spain uses an Automatic Payment system which requires a credit card and which demands payments when the new account reaches a charge of 50 Euros. Google Adwords stops all account advertising if the bill is not paid immediately. The "billing threshold" increases over time as payments are made but typically for most accounts the "billing threshold" will reach the point where a payment is demanded for every 500 Euros of account activity or every 30 days whichever comes first. The Google Adwords payment system is set up to avoid ever getting into the situation described in the article about this boy. Those much rarer accounts which have pay-per-click advertisements that cost well above this billing threshold have safeguards in place to ensure that payments are going to be made before Adwords allows the account to engage in placing those ads. This article smells not only fishy but also tastes like baloney.
It's actually considered essential education - an allowance helps kids develop essential money handling skills in a relatively safe environment. This includes skills like budgeting, saving, spending, and making money. Many banks offer accounts for kids to help facilitate this - which also helps show there's no magic money giving machine.
There is a very strong correlation between people who didn't have an allowance early in life and those who cannot manage money - ending up in severe debt because they didn't learn money management skills early in life.
It's why many banks offer no-fee youth accounts that let you do practically everything a normal account does - they realize demystifying money helps them become much better money managers later on and customers who are responsible.
Sorry, I'm too cynical to believe that banks provide accounts for minors to help them understand budgeting. They do it because research shows that they are likely to stay with that bank as adults and thus the bank will profit by having a bigger user base. Profit drives this, not altruism.
I get that the possessive sense is always its but OED says preceding a gerund or noun-verb that "its" is also correct. In the case of passé which is an adjective I'm not sure
Your OED passage says that the phrase, "its going," is ok, much like, "his going." "Its [gerund]" can be confusing, because it is (audibly) indistinguishable to mean "It is going" or the going of it, but it should be clear from context.
You would never say, "His passe," nor should you use "its passe."