When it comes to digital up-selling in the iTunes store Apple's default of suggesting HD video when buying video content has landed the company in hot water. When you go to purchase a video in iTunes the first option presented is the more expensive HD content, $1 extra, even if you're using an iOS device that doesn't support HD.
A Florida lawyer has filed a class action lawsuit against the company after he rented the more expensive HD copy of Adam Sandler's "Big Daddy" from the iTunes store in 2010, only to find the standard definition version delivered to his non-HD device.
To a degree you can say "buyer beware" as users with older devices deal with the digital landscape moving to higher resolution defaults. However when