J******e 发帖数: 11 | 1 If you buy a lot of iPhone apps or iTunes music, Apple (AAPL) gift
certificates are almost as good as cash.
Indeed, there's a lively trade in iTunes gift cards on eBay (EBAY), where a
$100 certificate will fetch anywhere from $82 to $109.99 on a Buy It Now
basis.
Now, as The Verge notes in its latest "Good Deal" tip, Walmart (WMT) has
entered the market, selling electronically delivered iTunes gift cards for
20% off. There's no sales tax, no delivery charge, no dealing with sketchy
eBay sellers.
The catch is that like any online purchase, you can't make it without giving
Walmart your name, address, e-mail and payment information (PayPal and
major credit cards accepted).
Walmart's privacy policy is pretty straightforward: They'll use your
personal information any way they want to short of selling or renting it to
third parties. From their "privacy policy" statement:
Walmart uses your information to provide products and services and to
support core business functions. These uses include order or service
fulfillment, internal business processes, marketing, authentication, loss
and fraud prevention, public safety and legal functions.
We may combine all the information we collect. We may disclose your
information within our corporate family of companies.
We may disclose your personal information to third parties under the
following limited circumstances:
with service providers or suppliers that help with our business
operations or joint products. [See note.]
with your consent.
when necessary to protect the safety, property, or other rights of
Walmart, customers, or associates, or when otherwise required by law.
Note: Walmart has business relationships with a long list of suppliers, from
Baby George clothes to Gold's Gym exercise equipment.
If all that is okay with you, $80 is a bargain. You can get it here:
http://www.walmart.com/ip/Email-Delivery-Apple-iTunes-100-eGift |
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