US sues Adobe for hiding termination fees and making it difficult to cancel subscriptions

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Aisha Malik 10:08 AM PDT • June 17, 2024
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The U.S. Department of Justice has filed a lawsuit against Adobe alleging that the company deceives consumers by hiding the early-termination fee and making it difficult for people to cancel their subscriptions.
In the complaint filed on Monday, the DOJ wrote that “Adobe has harmed consumers by enrolling them in its default, most lucrative subscription plan without clearly disclosing important plan terms.”

The government says Adobe pushed consumers toward the “annual paid monthly” subscription without informing them that canceling the plan in the first year would cost hundreds of dollars.
Adobe only discloses the early-termination fees when subscribers attempt to cancel, and turns the early-termination fee into a “powerful retention tool” by trapping consumers in subscriptions that they no longer want, the complaint says.

“During enrollment, Adobe hides material terms of its APM plan in fine print and behind option textboxes and hyperlinks, proving disclosures that are designed to go unnoticed and that most consumers never see,” according to the complaint. “Adobe then deters cancellations by employing an onerous and complicated cancellation process.”
Adobe says it plans to refute the claims in court.
“Subscription services are convenient, flexible and cost effective to allow users to choose the plan that best fits their needs, timeline and budget,” said Adobe’s General Counsel and Chief Trust Officer Dana Rao, in a statement. “Our priority is to always ensure our customers have a positive experience. We are transparent with the terms and conditions of our subscription agreements and have a simple cancellation process.”

The DOJ’s complaint says Adobe has violated federal laws designed to protect consumers. The government is seeking “injunctive relief, civil penalties, equitable monetary relief, as well as other relief.”

Adobe shifted to a subscription model in 2012 and started requiring consumers to pay for access to the company’s software on a recurring basis. In the past, users could access the company’s software after paying a one-time fee. Subscriptions account for most of the company’s revenue, the Federal Trade Commission notes.
 
Long ago, we boomers used to call that "purchasing" something.
Woah woah woah, purchasing means ownership, with icky things like actual user rights and protections and stuff like that Adobe just won't allow anyone to have.

Fuck software as a service, fuck games as a service... fuck that whole "as a service" mindset that's rotted the modern corporate world.
 
This is why you never give out any payment method unless it's something you know for 100% certain you want.
And even then, use: prepaid card > credit card > PayPal or something.
Can't get shekels from a stone.

Remember, kids. If buying isn't owning, then pirating isn't stealing.
 
They've convinced enough people that they are the industry standard to the point that many design/editing/etc. gigs where they require project files its always adobe, photoshop/after effects etc. so you cant even use alternate software if you want to.

Adobe has used their position of being seen as the industry standard, the default photo-editing software, etc. to price gauge people to an insane degree, to abruptly change their TOS to be able to spy on peoples work, and use peoples intellectual property.

It's fucked, Microsoft, Google, all these big companies once they get comfortable at the top that's when the greed really comes out and the anti-consumer practices start to become over the top.

I'm praying on adobes downfall.
 
God I hope the DOJ fucks Adobe with the legal equivalent of a spiked dildo

Fuck Adobe and for charging absurd money for their barely-functioning piece of shit software and for having the gall to make it as difficult as possible to cancel a subscription when it inevitably crashes costing you all of your progress

They've been failing along for LITERAL DECADES NOW, Total Adobe Death can't come soon enough
 
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