Linked by Thom Holwerda on Tue 28th Jun 2011 22:28 UTC
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Member since:
2007-02-22
... are legal because they imply the sale is final - i.e., you cannot return it for cash. You can still demand a refund if you can prove that what you recieved is substantially different than what you were sold. Some states in the US also require exchanges for defective products in the case of "all sales are final", although that's not considered a refund because the merchant is simply fulfilling the implied contract of purchase.
But if they sold the app store items "as is", like most open source licenses state, you would be agreeing to purchase it without the chance for an exchange or refund.
I don't have iTunes or the App Store, so I can't tell you what they used...