Some iPhone Developers Claim They Can’t Get Paid
11:14 pm, April 30th, 2009, Lonnie Lazar
A vocal cadre of iPhone app developers is none too pleased with the treatment they receive from Apple and may be considering a suit for breach of contract, according to a report at TechCrunch.
Examples of complaints on developer forums indicate that some developers remain unpaid for sales of their products on the App Store dating back to last fall and the report cites email exchanges between at least one developer and and the finance department at Apple in which the developer is informed his complaints about not being paid “border on harassment.”
Whether any actual lawsuits are in the offing is purely speculative at this point, but the discord is curious in the light of Apple’s recent recession-beating revenue performance and the stunning, widely publicized success of the App Store.
Posted by Lonnie Lazar in Apple, News, Software, iPhone | Comment on this article












If you have trying to get paid in 4 months and you get this answer:
Hello
Please stop emailing us. Your 22 emails in the past two days is bordering harassment. We receive a thousand emails a day, and will respond as soon as we can.
Kind regards,
 Dean Migchelbrink | iTunes Finance | Apple Inc
What would you do?
hrgpac, on May 1st, 2009 at 1:40 pm
I’d send an email to sjobs@apple.com.
I’ve personally received emails from Dean — he likes to whine about how busy his team is.
Albe, on May 3rd, 2009 at 8:52 am
first off, maybe his team is busy. considering how popular the app store has been it’s not out of the question
second, 22 emails in two days is a bit much. perhaps to say ‘bordering on harassment’ is a stretch but really. And I see nothing that suggests that the complainers didn’t try to settle things in a nice manner. the tone is all “give me my money, bitch” instead of “it seems that my payment for December sales didn’t not go through to my bank account. could you please confirm that it was sent and provide me with what documentation I need to show the failure and who I should send it to. thank you for your assistance”. that touch of courtesy is always appreciated by a busy office. and often will get you higher up the queue for a reply
Scott, on May 5th, 2009 at 9:22 am