Tired of Amazon Prime? Canceling it might not be as straightforward as you think. Here's what you need to know.
Amazon will pay $2.5 billion to settle claims by the U.S. Federal Trade Commission (FTC) that it used dark patterns to trick ...
Amazon will pay $2.5 billion under a proposed order by the FTC to settle allegations the ecommerce giant enrolled millions of consumers in Prime subscriptions without their consent -- and deliberately ...
Amazon will give refunds to consumers that were "harmed" by "deceptive Prime enrollment practices," according to the FTC.
Federal regulators say Amazon has agreed to pay a historic sum to resolve their allegations that its web designs manipulated ...
The lawsuit involved claims that some users, who can get up to $51 under the deal, intended to sign up solely for a ...
Amazon has agreed to pay $2.5 billion to resolve a lawsuit alleging the online retail giant tricked customers into signing up for Prime memberships.
Amazon has reached a historic $2.5 billion settlement with the Federal Trade Commission, which said the online retail ...
The FTC estimates that 35 million consumers were impacted by Amazon’s alleged unwanted Prime enrollment or deferred ...
The Seattle company will pay $1 billion in civil penalties — the largest FTC fine in FTC’s history, and $1.5 billion will be ...
Celebrating the victory after a 3–0 vote approving the settlement, FTC chairman Andrew Ferguson described Amazon's $2.5 billion payout as a "record-breaking, monumental win for the millions of ...
The Federal Trade Commission has secured a settlement with Amazon.com, Inc., as well as Senior Vice President Neil Lindsay and ...