A lawsuit against Amazon by the FTC moves forward with claims that Amazon tricks people into Prime subscriptions.
The lawsuit involved claims that some users, who can get up to $51 under the deal, intended to sign up solely for a lower-cost Prime Video subscription.
Last week, Amazon settled an antitrust lawsuit for $2.5 billion, after the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) accused the tech giant of deceiving tens of millions of customers to sign up for Prime ...
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Amazon settled with the Federal Trade Commission for $2.5 billion in fines over claims that the company allegedly tricked consumers into signing up for Prime and making it hard to cancel. Here's how t ...
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The FTC says Amazon used deceptive tactics to get customers to sign up for Prime and then made it difficult for them to cancel.
A federal trial in Amazon’s hometown will examine whether the online retailing giant tricked customers into signing up for its Prime service and made it difficult to cancel after they did so.
Amazon has been ordered to refund up to $1.5 billion to eligible Prime customers as part of a settlement with the FTC. Here's what to know about payments.
The FTC says Amazon tricked customers into signing up for Prime subscriptions and made it difficult to cancel.
You're only eligible for one Amazon Prime free trial period every 12 months, so you could wait to sign up and take advantage of Prime Day deals, or join for a month or two (one free, one paid) in the ...
As part of the settlement, Amazon will pay $1.5 billion in refunds to customers, who could receive $51 each from the payout.