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Play Store is now automatically approving refunds if they happen with 2 hours after the purchase. I have an Android App where people can create and control a VPS gaming host from the app. That is, when you start the app you go through a sign-up flow and afterwards you have a VPS that runs your game. After the sign-up you only need the app if you want to make any changes to the VPS.

I'm seeing people abusing this by purchasing the app (comes with 30 days free VPS), going through the sign-up flow to create their VPS, and afterwards they request a refund (which automatically gets approved if it's within 2 hours).

From Google Wallet I can see which OrderIDs are getting canceled, but how can I link that back to the users deviceID or something else that I can fetch in the app?

I'm forcing users to declare their Google user account before they can go through the sign up flow:

Intent intent = AccountPicker.newChooseAccountIntent(null, null, new String[]{"com.google"}, false, null, null, null, null);
// ...
email = data.getStringExtra(AccountManager.KEY_ACCOUNT_NAME);

But this only gives me their email address, which I can't link back to the OrderID that is the only identifier in Google Wallet.

How do I link their account/email/deviceID to the OrderID (or other information available in Google Wallet)?

Please note: This is NOT for in-app purchases where the OrderID is readily available. This is for the purchase of the app.

Thanks!

Edit: Google Play Services authorization and user account management doesn't get you all the way to OrderID: http://developer.android.com/google/auth/http-auth.html Here's the documentation on in-app billing which (not surprisingly) do not offer any way of getting information about the app purchase order ID: http://developer.android.com/google/play/billing/billing_reference.html Licensing doesn't provide OrderIDs either: http://developer.android.com/google/play/licensing/overview.html

Person with similar issue but also unanswered: http://pcandsys.com/20378/verify-purchase-in-google-play-by-orderid /b3

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  • Would asking the user to enter the order ID that they received in the email from Google Play Store into a screen in the app be helpful? If it works that way, maybe it could be a temporary solution until there is a better one.
    – Joe
    Jan 18, 2015 at 17:53
  • Theoretically that would work. Whenever I detect suspicious accounts I push a notification to the app asking them to email me a receipt of the purchase. What I've found using this method is that a lot of people using the phones/devices do not have access to the email they use for the purchases (where receipt is sent). Most likely because of the kids using the device using their parents device. The friction of having them send orderID I deem to be too high. Also, Google Play should really provice this service, rather than manual work of retrieving an orderID. I take you don't know if they do..?
    – beetree
    Jan 18, 2015 at 22:59
  • Sorry, I don't know actually. I agree that ideally the information should be available from Google Play. It just seems like we are probably not within the use cases that they would support by default. As an example for further complications, if I understand your scenario correctly, there is also a chance that the account that they selected in your app is not really the one that paid for it, right?
    – Joe
    Jan 19, 2015 at 16:17
  • It seems like this post might help us somehow (with the account verification). I'm not sure if we have all the pieces of puzzle yet or not though.
    – Joe
    Jan 19, 2015 at 16:24
  • Not exactly what we're looking for but it might do the job, assuming that the cracked apps can't fake the tokens. I'll try this out! I've tested the licensing lib from Play Store and that one they can crack. Also, it pings out so often that even legit/licensed apps sometimes gets flagged as unlicensed meaning that strict enforcement of the license is unfeasible.
    – beetree
    Jan 19, 2015 at 23:36

2 Answers 2

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Not exactly the answer to your question, but in your situation I would limit lease time to few hours, while installed app's background service should wake up once in a few hours in order to extend the lease time. Such a low frequency does not introduce any visible power consumption or data traffic impact. Of course in order to avoid possible collisions, lease time should be few times greater than update time (e.g. lease for 24 hours / updates once in 8 hours)

Another option may be to make your app free with trial period + in-app purchase in order to make it permanent

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  • Making the app free and then require an in-app purchase to pay for the service would technically work. I tried this and was swamped by bad reviews from people that was expecting a fully working app. By making it paid from the start I can avoid confused people downloading it with the expectation of the app being "usable" without further payments. Also, I can't have the app running in the background. The VPS needs to keep running even if they have the phone/device turned off for several days.
    – beetree
    Jan 18, 2015 at 2:41
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The only affordable solution that I see is to request a "confirmation of interest" from within the app, after the two hours have expired.

The flow would be:

00:00 User purchases app 00:05 User supplies his email address and signs up 00:10 VPS is activated. User is notified of COI requirement and acknowledges. 00:30 User requests refund

02:05 Remote server sends a friendly reminder email, "Hey, you need to confirm your interest to get your 30 days."

03:00 Lacking a COI, the VPS is paused/stopped pending deletion.

Users with their app still installed will have little trouble hitting confirm (the button is not enabled before the grace time has expired). Maybe you can even set a timed alarm?

Users with the app, that have it turned off, and who don't check the email (let's call them "Group G"), well. They will have to re-create the VPS. But they were warned, weren't they? They had no access to the email, but how about the app itself?

Users that try to download again the app will need to login to the same account as before. You can identify them easily enough.

You can also further reduce trouble for users, depending on the promptness of Play Store reporting (which I ignore). Let's say that you are informed of a refund with a delay which is guaranteed to not exceed X minutes. This means that if at any given moment there have been no refund notifications for at least 120+X minutes, all VPS created earlier than 120+X minutes ago and whose COI is still pending are as good as confirmed, and their pending status can be safely cleared with no need of user action. So all Group G users that happen to not have anyone requesting a refund at the same time they evaluate the app will still have no ill effects.

That said, it seems quite weird to me that Google does not allow an app to query "How was I born?" (with app and device ID) and receive its own order ID (or download ID, or uniquely generated ID) back, at least inside a reasonable time frame.

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