Anyone else get $$ today? eBook Antitrust Settlement

They sent me $28.24! Thanks iTunes! I trust you guys again.

For some reason, I didn’t get the email, but I do have a credit of $9.74. Yay! Thanks for the link, JSexton!

$4.83 for me.

Something around $70. If it is applied automatically to things I buy then it’ll get redeemed. If I actually have to do something then it it will sit in whatever account it sits in. Just like all of the Amazon gift certificates over the years I was given.

I got around $9 from Amazon, and already spent it.

I got 73 cents from B&N. I haven’t had a nook in years, though, as I went to a tablet instead of Kindle. I doubt I will use it.

My wife? She got $228 in credit from Amazon!

I also got 73 cents.

I got my email from B&N saying that I’m ABOUT to get my money, but haven’t received anything yet. I don’t buy many NYTimes bestsellers though, so I’m not expecting much.

We’re happy to let you know that your eBook Settlement credit for $34.60 is now in your Barnes & Noble account and ready to use.

$2.19. Whoooeee!

I got $5.11. Between that and my recently received $1.95 “dividend” from REI, I will be living large this weekend.

$142.86. I am happy.

$9! Cool…need a new book with Whispersync (my new favorite thing).

That said, and I know this is odd, but I wish I’d been given an opportunity to opt out. I don’t feel I was ripped off and therefore don’t deserve any compensation.

I knew what price I was being charged for the books I bought and that was acceptable to me when I bought them. So Amazon may be been harmed by having to charge higher prices than they wanted but I wasn’t harmed in paying those prices.

Wait. That’s $28.24 from Amazon. There is a second email from iTunes. Ha!! iTunes credit is for seventy three cents.

ETA: obfusciatrist has a point…

I got $42.61.

$10.72, whoo-hoo!!

I didn’t get my Kindle until Christmas 2012 so zip for me. But at least I didn’t get ripped off in the first place like you suckers!

I got a rock.

Wife and I got like $10. We were surprised it was that much, as the vast majority of our ebook consumption comes from the public domain, the library, Humble Bundles, or indie authors.