Sony fined £1.9m by Australian court over PlayStation refund policy

Sony has been slapped with a £1.9m fine by Australian authorities over its PlayStation refund policy.

The PlayStation Store has come under fire over the years for its refund policy.

Australia’s Federal Court handed Sony Europe, which operates the Australian PlayStation Support Centre as well as the country’s PSN terms of service, an AUD $3.5m fine because its digital refunds policy was found to be in breach of the Australian Consumer Law (ACL).

The Australian Competition and Consumer Commission (ACCC) found Sony Interactive Entertainment Network Europe Limited (Sony Europe) guilty of misleading four customers who complained to Sony that they had bought faulty PlayStation games. According to the ACCC, Sony customer service reps told them over the phone Sony Europe was not required to refund the game once it had been downloaded, or if 14 days had passed since it was bought.

“Consumer guarantee rights do not expire after a digital product has been downloaded and certainly do not disappear after 14 days or any other arbitrary date claimed by a game store or developer,” ACCC chair Rod Sims said.

Additionally, the Court said Sony breached the ACL by telling one of the four customers it didn’t have to give a refund unless the game developer authorised it, and it told a fifth customer that Sony could provide a refund using PlayStation Store credit instead of real-world money.

“What Sony told these consumers was false and does not reflect the consumer guarantee rights afforded to Australian consumers under the Australian Consumer Law,” Sims said.

“Consumers can obtain a repair, replacement or refund directly for products with a major fault from sellers and cannot simply be sent to a product developer.

“Refunds under the consumer guarantees must also be given in cash or money transfer if the consumer originally paid in one of those ways, unless the consumer chooses to receive store credit.”

The ACCC said between October 2017 and May 2019, Sony Europe’s Terms of Service implied users did not have consumer guarantee rights regarding the quality, functionality, completeness, accuracy or performance of their purchased digital games. This was false as these guarantees cannot be excluded, restricted or modified, the ACCC said.

“Consumers who buy digital products online have exactly the same rights as they would if they made the purchase at a physical store,” Sims said.

“No matter where in the world a company has its headquarters, if it is selling to Australian consumers, the Australian Consumer Law applies.”

Sony Europe admitted liability, and will also contribute to the ACCC’s legal costs.

Sony, and indeed other digital storefronts operated by video game companies, have come under fire from consumer rights groups over the years for their stringent refund policies.

In the UK, Sony was the subject of a 2015 BBC Watchdog programme that investigated the company’s digital refund policy after it received a number of complaints from PlayStation owners who had struggled to get their money back following fraudulent purchases.