News Photos
Search Advanced Sign in / Register fans
 
BUSINESS    
 

Advertisement

Dell ordered to sell 19-inch LCD displays for NT$500 in Taiwan
Taiwan News, Staff Writer , Agencies
2009-07-02 09:41 AM
+ Enlarge This image
In this Jan. 9, 2009 photo, Dell Computers are seen on display at the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas. Dell Inc. on Thursday, May 28, 2009 said its fiscal first-quarter profit fell 63 percent as the recession continued to crimp computer sales around the world. Taiwan's Consumer Protection Commission has ordered Dell to make good on sales from an online pricing error and deliver 19-inch LCD monitors to local consumers for NT$500. (AP Photo/Paul Sakuma)
Associated Press
Taiwan's Consumer Protection Commission has ordered Dell to make good on sales from an online pricing error and deliver 19-inch LCD monitors to local consumers for NT$500 (US$15.26).

The government agency said it received 471 complaints about the mix-up after Dell corrected the discount to reflect the NT$4,800 (US$146.46) price it should have given. Prior to the discount, the monitors cost NT$7,500 (US$228.84).

The pricing mistake was posted online June 25 at 11 p.m. and removed June 26 at 7 a.m. During that eight hour period, 26,000 people placed orders for nearly 140,000 displays.

The commission said Dell should sell each customer one monitor at the NT$500 price and then offer a descending discount on additional monitors ordered. Failure to comply with the order would be a violation of Taiwan's fair trade laws.

"If Dell fails to respond to this directive properly and concretely, then the [Taiwan government] will consider seeking legal alternatives," the statement says.

In a statement, Dell apologized for any inconvenience caused by the pricing error and said it "will offer reasonable discounts to the orders received under the wrong price."

The company is still in discussions with Taiwanese authorities on a final settlement of the issue, the statement says.

 
Have Your Say :

We welcome your comments on this and other stories. Comments are submitted for possible publication on the condition that they may be edited. Please provide your full name and suburb/location. We also require a working e-mail address – not for publication, but for verification only.

 
Post your feedback
 
 
 
More Business Stories
Ex-Vivendi CEO: I made mistakes but never misled   2009-11-21
Treasury prices fall, yields inch off lows   2009-11-21
SC jury finds '3 Hebrew Boys' guilty in scam   2009-11-21
US regulators shut small Florida bank   2009-11-21
Mexico's oil production drops 7 percent   2009-11-21
Mexico says new data reflect economic recovery   2009-11-21
Report: Hershey may launch bid for Cadbury   2009-11-21
Gold ekes out small gain, other metals hold steady   2009-11-21
US to mull Bernanke nomination on Dec. 3   2009-11-21
Mexico's economy rebounding, recession over   2009-11-21
Treasury prices drop, yields inch off lows   2009-11-21
P&G says it's still interested in acquisitions   2009-11-21
Ex-Vivendi CEO: I made mistakes but never misled   2009-11-21
Oil prices drop below $77 on economic doubt   2009-11-21
Volkswagen, Porsche move closer to merger   2009-11-21
Petters says he planned to tell gov't about fraud   2009-11-21
Dollar keeps gaining as traders pare risk exposure   2009-11-21
Investors sue US lawyer in fraud probe for $100M   2009-11-21
Stocks fall for 3rd day as dollar strengthens   2009-11-21
Asia markets fall as weak recovery signs pile up   2009-11-21
 
01     02   03   04   05   06   07   08   09   Next   >
 
To search for articles form the past seven days, Click on ARCHIVES
  7day free
 
 
TOP

©2009 Taiwan News All Rights Reserved.