Apple has closed its education discount loophole in the USA, following criticism from the US Department of Education. The loophole allowed students to receive discounts on Apple products and services through their schools, even if they were not enrolled in a degree program. The loophole was first discovered by The Verge in March, and it was quickly closed by Apple. “We have closed the education discount loophole that allowed students to receive discounts on Apple products and services through their schools, even if they were not enrolled in a degree program,” an Apple spokesperson said in a statement. “We apologize for any inconvenience this may have caused.” The Department of Education had been critical of the loophole, saying that it gave preferential treatment to students who were already using Apple products and services. “This is unacceptable,” US Secretary of Education Betsy DeVos said in a statement. “We are working with companies like Apple to ensure that all students have access to quality educational resources and opportunities.” ..


Apple has long offered a discount for students and people who work in education, but the company did a terrible job of actually making sure you were involved in education to get it. Those days are gone, as Apple is now using Unidays for verification in the US.

Unidays is a third-party verification service that’ll verify that you’re actually involved in education, whether it’s as a student or an educator. If you’re just a regular buyer who freely clicked on the education discount to save some money on Apple hardware, you won’t be able to snag those deals anymore, as noticed by Reddit users.

Outside of verifying your education status, Apple also limits the amount of hardware one person can buy in a year. Now, you can get a discount on one desktop computer, one Mac mini, one laptop, two iPads, and two accessories per year. For most people, that’s far more than they’ll buy in a year (or maybe even ten years), but if you’re trying to equip a classroom with Apple products, that’s not enough.

It would be interesting to know precisely how much money Apple lost to people using the education discount without actually qualifying. It makes sense for the company to crack down on people using it who aren’t supposed to, as the company stands to make some extra money from those shoppers paying the full price.

Apple already had a verification process in place in the UK and some other countries, so this only changes the buying process for Apple fans in the United States.

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