Apple Ends iTunes Allowances Next Month, Parents Will Have To Use Family Sharing Instead
Apple Ends iTunes Allowances Next Month, Parents Will Have To Use Family Sharing Instead - To avoid charges on their credit card that is linked with their Apple
ID, many parents use the iTunes feature called Allowances, which allows
them to put a set amount of credit on their account every month that
can be sent to their kids so they can make purchases on iTunes or the
App Store. However, parents will no longer have this luxury within
iTunes.
Apple announced on Thursday that iTunes Allowances will end on May
25. For those who have existing allowances in their account, those
allowances will remain there until they're completely used.
This doesn't mean that parents won't be able to still manage how much
their children are spending on their smartphones. Instead of
Allowances, Apple recommends that parents use Family Sharing.
Family Sharing is
the iPhone, iPad and Mac feature available for iOS 8 and later that
allows six people to share content without them having to share
accounts. This allows families to share photos from a birthday party or
the family calendar so that everyone knows what day they have baseball
practice or ballet.
With Family Sharing, one person is the family organizer who agrees to
pay for all the iTunes, iBooks and App Store purchases, and who invites
the other five family members to join. Anything purchased - whether
it's a song, movie or app - will then appear in the "Purchased" tab in
iTunes or the App Store so that each family member can download that
content if they wish. Each member still uses their own Apple ID.
Think your child will still make all the in-app purchases they want?
Turn on the "Ask to Buy" feature, which will alert the family organizer
when that member is trying to make a purchase. The family organizer can
then approve or deny that item.
To set up this feature on your mobile device, go to Settings > iCloud > Set Up Family Sharing. You will then have to follow the steps to complete this process. Mac users go to Apple menu > System Preferences > iCloud, and then select Set Up Family.
At least there still is a way to manage children's spending on their
mobile devices; just the way users do it is now slightly different.
iTunes Allowances was a more hidden feature anyway, whereas more people
might have heard of Family Sharing as it applies to Apple Music.
If users don't want to go the Family Sharing route or send money to
people outside of their five other family members, they can still send
and use iTunes gift cards.Source: Techtimes
Post a Comment