Canceling a subscription shouldn't be harder than signing up, FTC proposal says.
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at which point the judges that vote in favor of keeping existing cancellation systems will be deep faked into joining all of the very worst memberships possible.What is this I am feeling? It's like, different...
Is this what having a functioning regulatory system feels like?
Of course as pointed out above, someone will raise a suit and drag this to the supreme court and we will find out that obscure cancellation systems are a fundamental constitutional right because of some random 17th century court case about egg deliveries in colonial Virginia.
You do realize that what you posted didn't have anything to do with what you linked, right?Not quite, they try to get you to not cancel, and Amazon actually will bill your default card for “offers” for digital content without your consent.
For example:
https://consumerist.com/2016/10/03/...ou-have-on-file-if-your-primary-card-expires/
Makes sense. Yeah, people think that simply canceling a card will cancel every subscription tied to the card, and that's nonsense. Even if Amazon's TOS didn't cover this issue...which as you note it does, and it allows them to use other cards on the account...people need to understand that simply canceling a payment method doesn't mean you don't owe money. It just means they cannot easily collect the money you owe. Yes, most reasonable companies will simply terminate your access for nonpayment in this case. But are they required to? Or can they leave your access active, maintain your account in a past-due status (accruing charges monthly/yearly/etc.), then simply forward you to collections once it's economically viable to do so?You do realize that what you posted didn't have anything to do with what you linked, right?
The customer hadn't tried to cancel Prime. She thought that if she didn't renew the credit card, Prime would end for non-payment. Instead, it was charged to another active card she had on file.
That's not how a responsible person cancels a subscription in the first place, and she never attempted to cancel Prime to begin with.
The story is pretty bullshit because any card on file with Amazon can be charged if one card or the other is declined for whatever reason. It's part of the TOS for Prime. To avoid that, never have more than one card on file with Amazon. Had she deleted her expired card, the payment method would default to the other card. Just putting a second card on Amazon allows them to authorize subscription payments to the backup payment method it if the original (default) payment method is unavailable or expired.
Purchases made with an expired card will be declined and not go to the backup payment method automatically, but they may ask you to choose a backup payment method when it's decline. Subscriptions are presumed to be wanted, and so payment reverts to the backup method if the default method isn't available to continue the subscription uninterrupted.
The woman was an idiot for trying to cancel her Prime by letting the card she'd used on Amazon expire instead of just canceling it. It's actually very easy to cancel Prime.
Did you do this early on? AFAIK, if you're monthly, they don't refund you anything, but you get to use all services until the end of the billing month. If you pay annually, then same difference.. when the billing date rolls by for the end of the year since you first signed up, that's when it stops (no prorated refund).We can all find bad things to say about amazon, but to their credit, if you cancel PRIME, they immediately cancel it for you and refund any remaining amount owed to you. I can only wish that cancelling a membership I have with a car wash, or the gym was so easy....
That's when you call your credit card company and dispute the charges. Give them the "I've attempted to cancel on xx/xx/xx and xx/xx/xx and they are unavailable."Yes, please!!
I am stuck getting billed by a company that requires you to call to cancel, but doesn’t pick up the phone very often.
Business concept: one time credit card. You sign up with 1Time and your visa card is valid for one transaction. Once used the company cancels the number and all future transactions on that card and immediately issues you a new card via secure internet protocol.
Should I head to GoFundMe?
Huh, out of random curiosity when did you cancel?We can all find bad things to say about amazon, but to their credit, if you cancel PRIME, they immediately cancel it for you and refund any remaining amount owed to you. I can only wish that cancelling a membership I have with a car wash, or the gym was so easy....
They already have these. Citi ccards call them "Virtual Numbers". Bank of America used to have them too but I can't remember what they were called. BoA discontinued that service, supposedly, because their customers weren't using it. I called BS on that one and moved to Citi. I use Citi Virtual Numbers for any charge that I don't make with a physical ccard. They are very convenient. You won't let me cancel the service? I'll just close/cancel that virtual number. Cry me a river.Business concept: one time credit card. You sign up with 1Time and your visa card is valid for one transaction. Once used the company cancels the number and all future transactions on that card and immediately issues you a new card via secure internet protocol.
Should I head to GoFundMe?
Citi ccards "Virtual Number".They exists from a bunch of credit card providers but they make subscriptions a pain in the ass. You would need to manually change your CC # on Netflix every single month and likewise do that for every other subscription.
What is really needed is a virtual card # which is perpetual until cancelled by the user.
While I'm in no way advocating for anyone to do that... it would be funny AF if someone did. Imagine signing Clarence Thomas up for a bunch of really out there gay porn magazines and DVDs and having it delivered to his SCOTUS office, or his wife's office. Or signing the women Justices up for a bunch of Planned Parenthood literature. I'd say get the conservative Justices a subscription to some kind of law review periodical, but that might be a little too on the nose.at which point the judges that vote in favor of keeping existing cancellation systems will be deep faked into joining all of the very worst memberships possible.
Republicans generally support anything that would make people’s lives worse.Why is it every. single. time. there's some law or regulation proposed that would actually help consumers, Republicans are always against it? And how is it people don't recognize this and stop voting for these assholes until one of them has the balls (real or metaphorical) to actually serve the interests of their constituents? I mean fuck... If you don't want to vote for a democrat, and think that's your only other option, you could just not vote as a sort of vote of no confidence.
I summarize it as "Republicans are evil and Democrats are incompetent."Republicans generally support anything that would make people’s lives worse.
Democrats are generally HORRIBLE at messaging so they constantly lose to the Make People’s Lives Worse party.
Nah, they don't need citations for alternative facts. They're facts. Self-evident facts. Clearly every consumer enjoys standover tactics and misleading and deceptive conduct when trying to cancel a subscription for something that probably never should have been a subscription in the first place.Consumers prefer and enjoy? Citation needed.
Because "both sides."Why is it every. single. time. there's some law or regulation proposed that would actually help consumers, Republicans are always against it? And how is it people don't recognize this and stop voting for these assholes until one of them has the balls (real or metaphorical) to actually serve the interests of their constituents? I mean fuck... If you don't want to vote for a democrat, and think that's your only other option, you could just not vote as a sort of vote of no confidence.
After John Oliver's segment last week about time share agreements, this is a law that I'm sure plenty of people would be overjoyed to have.
Not my experience. I cancelled Prime with 2 months left in an annual subscription and Amazon tried to walk away with those last two months of service. Service ended the instant I hit the confirm button and I had to call to get a refund.Did you do this early on? AFAIK, if you're monthly, they don't refund you anything, but you get to use all services until the end of the billing month. If you pay annually, then same difference.. when the billing date rolls by for the end of the year since you first signed up, that's when it stops (no prorated refund).
They ARE serving their constituents. Which are the businesses that contribute the money that gets them elected. You are mistaken if you think their constituents are the voters in their districts.Why is it every. single. time. there's some law or regulation proposed that would actually help consumers, Republicans are always against it? And how is it people don't recognize this and stop voting for these assholes until one of them has the balls (real or metaphorical) to actually serve the interests of their constituents? I mean fuck... If you don't want to vote for a democrat, and think that's your only other option, you could just not vote as a sort of vote of no confidence.
After John Oliver's segment last week about time share agreements, this is a law that I'm sure plenty of people would be overjoyed to have.
Ideally, a company would prove they're compliant with this rule by either proving they handle payments and cancellations in a compliant manner, or outsourcing payment and cancellation to a compliant third party. In an environment like that, Apple would still have a compelling story that they should be that third party.If the government forces Apple to allow 3rd party stores they should make sure the ability to cancel subscriptions remains the same for these stores as well.
I had a similar situation. Worse, Comcast not only didn't cancel my service, they signed me up for new ones. Given that I had sold my house that wasn't acceptable.A while back I went to cancel my cable subscription. They just wounldn't do it. I was kept on hold for 40 minutes before the very PA dude finally acquiesced. I obviously would never do business with them again. I wrote to the cable company and, of course, they did nothing and offered me nothing. I'm retired so I just play games on my computer or watch a video while they "make" me wait. The joke is on them in my case since that's my usual afternoon activity and cancelling cable is just another fun fill in activity.
No, that would get in the way of spontaneous purchases, which is the entire business model of many companies.So companies are going to force you to sign up by phone now?
Color me surprised that Republican didn't claim this is a "woke rule."Consumers prefer and enjoy? Citation needed.
Some credit card companies will provide you the courtesy of continuing to approve reoccurring subscriptions on your old card. You still have to cancel. AMEX is a company that does this. I had my card replaced for fraud and they kept paying previously established subscriptions so I didn’t immediately have to update them with new billing information.I know it's a bit late now, but couldn't you just request a new CC number? The old one gets closed out, you don't take the ding on your credit score (which is a whole other issue that needs addressing) and so when the obnoxious company tries to bill your card the next time, the account number is no longer valid.
I had to cancel my gym membership during COVID and my local gym was closed. I’d also just received a diagnosis that made it difficult to drive.Yeah, but I tried to cancel LA Fitness's Personal Training within the legally required three day cancellation with a full refund period.. Mailed the certified letter which was received, I didn't get a refund for a few weeks and was nearing the next monthly charge, so I had to bird dog them via Twitter (one of the last good uses for Twitter), to get them to cancel. Even though the person who called me on the phone said they would cancel before the next charge, they didn't. Ultimately it took another request via Twitter to get a refund.
Yep, the hidden "let me save a bit for couple months" button. Even if you consider staying all-along and not cancelling, this is an option to save a few bucks (the streaming giants will survive).Well a "negative option feature" in FTC parlance means "the consumer gets automatically charged for continued usage." So having a button would remove the negative option for consumers because they'd have to do something to affirm their continued usage. She's suggesting something like this would force companies to get rid of negative options altogether and force customers to go in and affirmatively renew their subscription every time the term ended.
However you're right that it's disingenuous since the mandate is basically "you have to allow people to cancel your service in the same ways you allow them to sign up and you can't make it hard for them to cancel." A business acting in good faith is not going to run afoul of this kind of rule because they are already providing an easy way to cancel your subscription - it's only scummy operations like cable companies and gyms that seem to pull this kind of thing.
I just cancelled my HBO Max subscription last month - a fairly easy to find button in my account management page on the website, didn't give me the runaround, did offer me a lower price for 6 months if I kept my sub instead of cancelling, took no for an answer and cancelled immediately when I declined. It's the same way every time I've cancelled Amazon Prime or Netfix. That's pretty much exactly what the mandate being described here would require. It's not a burden on legit businesses.
Yes, terrifying actually what is legally allowed. It must be second to selling your soul.God that segment was eye-opening. I knew they were bad but I had no idea how bad. So many times I was stunned that any of it, like saddling your heirs with it was legal.
Like, per the rule that it must be at least as easy as signing up, it probably means you'd have to sit through a 7 hour timeshare cancellation seminar, but it sounds like most people would find that an acceptable price for actually getting rid of them.
I guess, fair and well-played add it to my brain cellsThis is way past due. This should have been a law a long time ago. Though I have found a way to cancel over the phone without all the headaches.
It typically starts by interrupting the person on the other end as they start their high pressure sales pitch and telling them that I really, really, really despise this type of account cancellation process and tend to be a HUGE dick to the other person if they just don't cancel my account immediately. I tell them they can just save us both a lot of time and frustration if they don't force me to be a HUGE dick to them. It usually ends with a long pause and then typically, "OK, so we'll just cancel your account". And that's the end of it.
I know the other person is just doing a job, so I try and give them the opportunity to just cancel my account without any drama.
This one?Wasn't That Fucking Orange Guy also abusing the lack of "easy cancellation" laws in his election campaigning? I remember an article about something like that in 2020, about how his donation website was so carefully worded as to hide that the "one time" donation was in fact a monthly recurring charge...
The political arm of House Republicans is deploying a prechecked box to enroll donors into repeating monthly donations — and using ominous language to warn them of the consequences if they opt out: “If you UNCHECK this box, we will have to tell Trump you’re a DEFECTOR.”
Oh yes, that's it. And that “If you UNCHECK this box, we will have to tell Trump you’re a DEFECTOR.” quote is even worse than I thought, straight from Godfather territory – "you know, you have such nice children here, it would be a real shame if..."This one?
https://www.nytimes.com/2021/04/03/us/politics/trump-donations.html
Also found this, that I don't remember seeing.
https://www.nytimes.com/2021/04/07/us/politics/republicans-donations-trump-defector.html
privacy.com provides exactly that - virtual cards for subscriptions. I canceled my Spotify by simply deleting my "Spotify" virtual card. I didn't even bother to look for a cancel option on the account.They exists from a bunch of credit card providers but they make subscriptions a pain in the ass. You would need to manually change your CC # on Netflix every single month and likewise do that for every other subscription.
What is really needed is a virtual card # which is perpetual until cancelled by the user.